AI Video Generator

Turn any image into motion

Upload a start image, pick a motion clip, and generate a short video with Kling motion control. Browse the examples below to see what's possible, then sign in to create your own.

Motion Gallery

Video Examples

A separate set of video examples for this page, so the landing showcase and the generator page are not repeating the same clips.

AI baby dance motion test

AI baby dance motion test

Test whether an AI-generated baby character can carry believable full-body dance motion before committing to a longer creative sequence.

Rooftop K-Pop dance challenge

Rooftop K-Pop dance challenge

Evaluate a trending K-Pop dance challenge on a rooftop to see if the choreography translates cleanly into a motion preset.

Lowrider C-Walk street dance

Lowrider C-Walk street dance

Preview sharp c-walk footwork next to a lowrider car to validate whether street dance motion holds up for social edits.

Glam sway fashion motion

Glam sway fashion motion

Check whether a glamorous sway dance has enough smooth body movement for fashion and beauty campaign concepts.

Common Questions

Video FAQ

A few practical questions about how teams usually use the video workflow inside Zorq AI.

I

What is this page best for?

Use /video when you already know the motion direction you want to test, or when you have a starting image ready for image-to-video workflows.

II

Do I need a start frame?

Not always. Text-only prompts work for basic motion ideation, but a strong start frame usually makes image-to-video results easier to control and review.

III

Can I compare multiple motion ideas here?

Yes. The page is designed for iterative work: generate one concept, review it, then refine prompts or frames to compare direction quickly.

IV

Where do completed videos appear?

The current generation appears on the right preview panel, and recent generations stay available below or in your app video history.

V

What should I do before using image-to-video?

Start with a strong first frame. If you do not have one yet, generate or prepare that image first so the motion run starts from a clearer visual foundation.

VI

How do teams usually control quality?

Most teams begin with lower-cost settings to validate concept and pacing, then move to stronger settings only after the direction is approved.

VII

What makes a video prompt work better?

Clear subject, camera intent, movement description, lighting, and environment details usually produce more reviewable motion drafts than short generic prompts.

VIII

When should I use video instead of image generation?

Use video when timing, motion, camera behavior, or narrative rhythm matter to the decision. Use image first when the team still needs to align on look and composition.