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Best prompts for VEO3 for video scenes using camera angles

12 copy-ready VEO3 prompts for generating camera-angle-driven shot lists, coverage plans, and movement choreography for scenes. Each entry includes a concise title, a short explanation, a ready-to-paste VEO3 prompt, a realistic example scenario, and recommended AIs.

GPT-5
Claude Sonnet 4
Claude Opus 4
Gemini 2.5 Pro
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Picture this: you're staring at VEO3's interface, knowing you want cinematic camera angles but ending up with bland, static shots that look more like security footage than professional video. You've got the vision in your head, but translating that into prompts that actually deliver dynamic, purposeful cinematography feels like speaking a foreign language.
These 12 battle-tested VEO3 prompts transform you from someone struggling with basic camera descriptions into a director who confidently commands every angle, movement, and transition. Each prompt comes with specific technical details, real-world scenarios, and copy-paste instructions that generate everything from intimate close-ups to complex tracking shots. Stop settling for amateur-looking footage and start creating videos with the kind of professional camera work that keeps viewers glued to their screens.
1
Three-point coverage for two-person dialogue
VEO3: Create a detailed three-point coverage shot list for a 90–120 second two-person dialogue in a living room. Provide shots labelled Master, OTS-A, OTS-B, CU-A, CU-B, and two reaction inserts. For each shot include: shot number, purpose (coverage/coverage for cutaway/emotion), framing (e.g., 2-shot wide / OTS over A's shoulder), camera angle (eye-level/low/high), recommended lens focal length, approximate duration in seconds, camera movement (static/dolly/push), camera position relative to actors (distance and compass), actor blocking notes, eyeline and continuity tips, and suggested cut points. End with a short note on preferred audio capture and rehearsal notes.
Generate a practical three-point coverage plan for a 90–120s two-person dialogue scene, including master, over-the-shoulder (OTS) shots, and close-ups with durations, lens choices, and continuity notes.
2
Dynamic tracking shot through environment
VEO3: Produce a step-by-step plan for a 20–40 second dynamic tracking shot that moves through three distinct spaces (e.g., hallway → staircase → kitchen). For each segment provide: entry and exit framing, exact camera movement (gimbal/dolly/pedestal/crane), suggested speed (m/s or beats), lens choice, choreography for actors and extras, obstacles and mitigation (lighting, cables), transition points to coverage shots, and a rehearsal checklist with marks and cues.
Plan a continuous tracking shot through multiple set pieces: camera path, blocking, transitions, speed, platform (gimbal/dolly/steadicam), and when to cut to inserts.
3
Close-up emotion montage with macro/rack-focus guidance
VEO3: Create a montage of 6–8 close-up shots (faces, eyes, hands, props) that escalate a character's emotional state over 30–45 seconds. For each insert, provide: precise framing (tight eye, mouth, hands), recommended focal length and aperture (e.g., 85mm f/1.8), suggested rack-focus timeline and pull points, micro camera moves (0.2–0.5m pushes/pulls), expected duration, and notes on practical lighting to maintain consistent skin tones across inserts.
Specify a sequence of close-up inserts to build emotional intensity, with aperture, focal length range, rack-focus cues, and micro-movements for each shot.
4
Action fight coverage and safety plan
VEO3: Deliver a detailed multi-camera coverage plan for a 30–60 second choreographed fight in a bar. Provide a master wide, two mids, two close inserts, recommended camera placements (height/angle/distance), lens suggestions, camera movement for each unit, stunt safety camera angles (no frontal hits), recommended shot order for editing (A-roll/B-roll), beat-by-beat timing for key moves, and on-set safety notes (padding, rehearsal time, medic).
Map multi-camera coverage for a short choreographed fight scene: master, wide, mid, close inserts, safe camera angles for stunts, and notes for timing and cutting for rhythm.
5
POV and subjective camera sequence
VEO3: Generate a 20–40 second POV sequence for a character entering a tense environment. Specify camera rig (bodycam/shoulder/handheld), recommended lens and FOV, shake/settle parameters, eyeline alignment instructions for each hit, interactive blocking (how actors should react to camera), and cut points back to objective coverage. Include audio capture tips for breath and SFX sync.
Design a POV-driven sequence with directives for lens, stabilization, eye-line matching, interactive blocking, and sound sync to sell subjectivity.
6
Crane/establishing-to-intimate close-up
VEO3: Plan a 25–40 second crane/jib move starting with a wide establishing frame and ending on a tight close-up. Provide crane path, start/end heights, recommended lens combo (wide for establishing, tele for close), suggested speed curve (beats per second), precise timing for focus pulls, and instructions for swapping to handheld or dolly once close. Add notes for lighting changes and actor marks.
Outline a crane or jib move that begins as a wide establishing shot and resolves into an intimate close. Include timing, charted crane speed, lens swaps, and transition to handheld if needed.
7
OTS conversation with reaction-cut timing
VEO3: Create an OTS-focused shot plan for a 60–90 second conversational exchange. For each OTS (A over B's shoulder and B over A's shoulder) provide: shoulder framing guidance (how much of the shoulder/head to show), lens choice, headroom/lead room, eyeline anchor point, ideal reaction cut timing (in beats or seconds), and continuity rules to avoid 180° violations. Suggest two alternate angles for pickups and one cutaway.
Produce a precise over-the-shoulder (OTS) shot plan, with recommended shoulder framing, eyeline match, reaction cut timing, and how to preserve 180° continuity.
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