九宫格提示词

The prompt: Use the uploaded characters as references, keeping facial structure, proportions, and identity exactly consistent with the character references and naturally integrated into the scene. They sit directly opposite each other at a table inside [LOCATION], arranged for a dialogue sequence. All panels must appear as [VISUAL STYLE] frames (e.g., live action, anime). Build a single 3x3 cinematic storyboard grid, panels clearly separated by thin borders, counted left to right, top to bottom, adhering strictly to the shot structure below:

1: The Master Shot — wide, slightly elevated establishing frame that maps the spatial relationship between characters, table and environment, revealing architectural context and background movement.

2: The Two-Shot — balanced medium-wide frame at seated eye level, holding both characters in equal visual weight across the table, preserving clean eye-line continuity.

3: Over-the-Shoulder (Character A) — camera placed just behind Character A’s shoulder on the established side of the axis, using their shoulder as a soft foreground frame while focusing on Character B.

4: Over-the-Shoulder (Character B) — camera remains on the same conversational axis, positioned behind Character B’s shoulder, maintaining consistent screen direction and spatial logic while framing Character A.

5: Medium Close-Up (Character A) — chest-up framing, with controlled contrast and softly diffused background detail.

6: Medium Close-Up (Character B) — chest-up framing mirroring the previous shot, maintaining visual rhythm and lighting continuity.

7: Close-Up (Character A) — tight facial framing capturing fine emotional detail, shallow depth of field isolating the subject from the environment.

8: Close-Up (Character B) — tight facial framing counterbalancing the previous close-up, matching lens behavior and lighting quality.

9: Insert Shot — extreme close-up of [PHYSICAL DETAIL]