30s Multi-Shot Montage
Multiple shots up to 30 seconds from one prompt, based on BACH's public Montage workflow.
Best for short film beats, action scenes, visual transitions, and campaign concepts that need a beginning, middle, and end.
BACH AI Video centers on Bach 1.0 multi-shot generation: up to 30s Montage, Element to Video, image-to-video, locked characters, cinematic camera control, and native 1080p output.
Up to 30s
multi-shot video
Multiple shots
one prompt Montage
Element to Video
subject plus scene control
Bach 1.0 model
locked characters and 1080p
Bach AI video examples
Bach 1.0 model features
Multiple shots up to 30 seconds from one prompt, based on BACH's public Montage workflow.
Best for short film beats, action scenes, visual transitions, and campaign concepts that need a beginning, middle, and end.
Same character across shots, with directed expressions and less identity drift.
Repeat the character identity, wardrobe, face, and emotional state across shots so Bach has a stable subject to preserve.
Use camera language like whip pans, rack focus, lighting, and shot movement.
Prompts can carry lens, shot size, camera move, lighting, and pacing instructions instead of only describing the scene.
Pick a subject, set the scene, and generate a more controlled video composition.
Useful when the object or subject matters more than a generic text-to-video scene. Start with the element, then define context.
Start from an existing image and turn it into motion with shot-level direction.
Use a source frame for identity, product, style, or composition, then describe how the frame should move.
Official positioning highlights native 1080p, 30fps assets, and production-ready output.
Bach positions the model around native 1080p, fluid 30fps motion, physical consistency, and production-ready video assets.
Prompt patterns
Good Bach prompts read like a shot list: subject identity, scene, camera language, motion, lighting, and continuity constraints.
A cinematic 50mm close-up reveals a frostbitten man half-buried in a blizzard. Cut to a shaky 24mm handheld tracking shot as he sprints through deep snow. Cut to an overhead drone angle showing the figure fleeing across an infinite frozen plain while the snow violently erupts behind him. Keep facial consistency and smooth transitions.
Director's Note: Write the sequence as shots. Keep the same subject description in every shot.
A continuous animation follows a cute fox through style transitions: needle-felted stop motion on moss, bright 3D forest, vibrant 2D cartoon clouds, grayscale cartoon, then rough pencil sketch on a notebook page.
Director's Note: Use one subject and describe how the visual style changes over time.
A woman stands on a concrete rooftop at sunset with a hazy New York skyline. Wide low-angle shot. Medium shot with wind moving her trench coat. Close-up profile with golden sunlight through her hair.
Director's Note: Define the subject, location, lighting, and camera distance before motion.