- Midjourney launched her first AI video model, V1.
- The model allows users to animate images in five -second movement clips.
- The tool is relatively affordable and a possible rival for Google Veo or Sora d’Opnai.
Midjourney has long been a popular image assistant, but now society has made movements and films with its very first video model, simply named V1.
This video image tool is now available for the community of 20 million people from Midjourney, who want to see five-second clips based on their images, and up to 20 seconds of them extended by five seconds.
Despite being a whole new business to Midjourney, the V1 model has enough to do at least comparisons with rival models like Sora d’Opnai and Veo 3 from Google, especially when you consider the price.
For the moment, Midjourney V1 is in web beta, where you can spend credits to animate any image that you create on the platform or download yourself.
To make a video, you simply generate an image in Midjourney as usual, press “Animating”, choose your movement settings and let AI go to work.
The same goes with the download of an image; You just need to mark it as a starting frame and enter a personalized movement prompt.
You can let AI decide how to move it, or you can take the reins and describe how you want the movement to go. You can choose between a low movement or a high movement depending on whether you want a calm movement or a more frantic scene, respectively.
The results I have seen certainly integrate in the current time of AI, good and bad video production. The suffocation of the valley is still waiting to trap users, but there are surprisingly good examples from Midjourney and initial users.
Ai Battles Video
Midjourney video is really funny from R / Midjourney
Midjourney does not try to compete with Sora or Veo in terms of technical power. These models make 4K images of cinematographic quality with photorealistic lighting and long -shaped stories based solely on the text. They are trained on data terroces and emphasize the coherence of the frames and the temporal stability that Midjourney does not pretend to offer.
Midjourney’s video tool does not pretend to be the next Hollywood CGI pipeline. The land is more easy to be easy and fun to use for artists or independent odds and ends in the AI media.
And it really comes out as quite cheap. According to Midjourney, video work costs roughly the same thing as scaling, or for a second cost image of the video.
This is 25 times cheaper than most AI video services on the market, according to Midjourney and a superficial examination of other alternatives.
This is probably for the best, because a lot of Hollywood manages to Midjourney in court. The company is currently faced with a high challenge trial of several Disney, Universal studios and other declarations to train its models on the content protected by copyright.
For the moment, Midjourney AI generators for images and video remain active, and the company plans to extend its video production capacities. Midjourney teases long -term plans for full 3D rendering, stage control and even immersive global exploration. This first version is just a springboard.
The defenders of Sora and Veo probably don’t have to panic yet, but perhaps they should keep an eye on Midjourney’s plans, because if they are busy building the AI version of an team of cameras in the studio, Midjourney has just given a magic flipbook to anyone with a little money for his credits.