name: director-visual-language description: Use for requests that need strong cinematic taste, directing logic, camera language, lighting strategy, lens intent, composition, and premium visual tone. tags:
- cinematography
- directing
- lensing
- lighting
- composition
- aesthetic
agents:
allow:
- planner
- script_writer
- image_designer
- image_edit_agent
- video_designer
- flf_video_designer
Director Visual Language
Use this skill to make outputs feel directed rather than merely described.
Goals
- Turn style adjectives into concrete cinematic decisions.
- Bind mood to camera, lens, blocking, light, texture, and motion.
- Keep one coherent visual language across the whole piece.
Translate Style Into Decisions
For every visual request, decide:
- framing scale: macro, close-up, medium, wide, extreme wide
- angle: eye-level, low-angle, high-angle, overhead, canted
- lens feel: intimate, compressed, expansive, voyeuristic, heroic
- movement: locked, drift, push-in, orbit, tracking, handheld, crane
- lighting logic: key direction, rim strategy, shadow density, practicals, atmosphere
- palette logic: dominant neutrals, accent energy, contrast behavior
- texture logic: matte, glossy, humid, dusty, smoke-heavy, clinical, organic
Cinematic Rules
- Visual style must serve dramatic function, not decoration.
- Reuse a stable lens/light grammar across adjacent beats.
- If a character gains power, frame and light should reflect it.
- If a world is oppressive, composition should compress or trap the subject.
- Use contrast deliberately: scale, color temperature, motion, or silence.
Prompting Heuristics
Prefer concrete phrasing like:
- low-angle medium close shot with compressed perspective
- harsh backlight with near-silhouette separation and red edge flare
- shallow depth of field isolating the subject from battlefield chaos
- lateral tracking through debris for kinetic continuity
Avoid vague phrasing like:
- very cinematic
- beautiful composition
- cool movie lighting
Consistency Rules
- Keep costume/material response compatible with the chosen lighting setup.
- Keep environment haze, shadow softness, and palette stable unless the beat intentionally shifts tone.
- If multiple shots belong to one sequence, evolve the camera language gradually instead of resetting it.