Example 1
Source-style reproduction case with Farewell My Concubine.
Example parameters
Movie title
霸王别姬
Short quote
不疯魔,不成活
Fan references
京剧虞姬妆容、戏服头饰、段小楼背影、旧戏台、梅枝、破碎纸形留白。
Example import code
EN-T2I-004@ex-001
霸王别姬
不疯魔,不成活
京剧虞姬妆容、戏服头饰、段小楼背影、旧戏台、梅枝、破碎纸形留白。
尘世契约
契约既成
原神钟离主题电影化:钟离侧脸或半身剪影、岩元素几何纹、茶盏、一枚摩拉、璃月山水剪影。
Inception
You mustn't be afraid to dream a little bigger.
旋转陀螺、折叠城市、梦境层级、电梯、酒店走廊、海边潜意识与清醒边界。
Create a vertical 2:3 minimalist high-end creative movie art poster.
Movie title: {{movie_title}}
Short quote: {{quote_text}}
Fan references: {{fan_references}}
Design the poster around the film's most representative character identity, key prop, classic scene, emotional relationship, or symbolic object, but do not make an ordinary collage of movie stills. First understand the movie title and fan references, then distill them into one centered key visual: a profile or silhouette, prop outline, scene fragment, symbolic architecture, costume detail, gesture, flower, car, stage, door, window, landscape, smoke, thread, crack, or another visual symbol that genuinely belongs to the work. Prefer one large restrained silhouette, profile, prop outline, or abstract main shape. Do not turn the character into an ordinary detailed half-body illustration.
The style is non-photorealistic high-end graphic design, somewhere between refined illustration, art poster, editorial design, and flat graphic poster. The key visual should be clear and memorable, with a few subtle internal details that work as fan references. People who know the work should recognize relationships, turning points, props, or scenes from those details, while people who do not know it should still see an elegant art poster.
Use generous negative space and a clean, restrained composition. Place the key visual at the center or slightly off center, surrounded by warm white, ivory, pale beige, soft gray, or paper-toned empty space. You may use double exposure, a silhouette containing a scene, torn-paper shapes, masks, thin connecting lines, minimal geometric planes, or tiny symbolic patterns, but keep the number of elements low. Do not place every piece of movie information into the image. When the references include a large world, city, harbor, battlefield, or sprawling place, compress it into fine linework inside a silhouette, small symbols, prop patterns, or a partial scene fragment rather than a complete panorama. Facial features and costume details should support silhouette and symbol recognition; keep them softened, masked, and graphic so they do not overpower the negative space or main shape.
Use a soft, muted, subtle, sophisticated palette: warm ivory, smoke gray, ink black, muted gold, old rose, mist blue, gray green, dark red, faded brown, or a small accent color naturally derived from the film. Lighting should be quiet, gentle, paper-like, or lightly printed. Avoid saturated neon, cheap gradients, and exaggerated blockbuster gloss.
The poster may include the movie title and one very short representative quote. Typography should feel like a real art poster: small, restrained, elegant, using serif type, minimalist sans-serif type, calligraphic title lettering, or an artistic font that fits the film. Integrate the title and quote into the negative space, the edge of the key visual, or a quiet empty area. Do not cover the subject. If accurate text rendering is unstable, prioritize the typography mood and keep only a short title or abstract letterforms rather than long garbled text.
If the input comes from a game, animation, novel, series, or fictional world, treat it as a movie poster: preserve recognizable character identity, world cues, symbolic props, main colors, and emotional relationships, then reinterpret them through cinematic poster language. Do not copy official screenshots, character art, UI, logos, promotional-poster compositions, or real actor photos. Do not recreate an existing poster pixel by pixel.
Avoid photorealism, celebrity headshots, ordinary still collages, cluttered full-frame composites, cheap template design, too much small text, subtitle walls, logos, watermarks, garbled text, low clarity, unrelated decoration, cramming in the full cast, drawing only a generic person with no film-specific clue, and turning fan references into literal explanatory text.