
AIVideo
VideoGenerate complete AI videos from a prompt or script, including visuals, narration, captions, music, and sound effects.
Overview
AIVideo is an all-in-one AI video creation platform that can turn a topic, script, or image into short videos with generated clips, narration, captions, background music, and sound effects. It is built for creators who want coherent social videos without learning several separate tools for scripting, image generation, video generation, and editing. The best results still come from clear direction and manual polishing, especially when you need exact characters, readable text, or a complete story arc.
Platforms
- Web
Video review
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Video transcript
In this video I'll show you an AI tool that generates coherent videos, video scripts, and even music and sound effects from just a text description. It can also turn images into videos, like this one of me playing a guitar—that never happened—and for that it uses latest technologies like Kling 1.6. And the best thing: it's all included in one easy-to-use tool. You don't have to learn a bunch of different complicated tools. Really everyone can use this. And in this video I show you step by step how to use this. We'll take an honest look at the results, and I give you some tips on how to create coherent videos that make sense from beginning till end.
My name is Florian Walther and this is the AI Tool Corner, where I review the latest AI software to find out which ones can actually improve your life and business.
Okay, let's jump right in. We go to aivideo.com. I will also put a link to it into the video description. And here we create an account. As you can see I already created a bunch of videos. We'll create a new video together in a moment, but first I want to show you some of my previous generations. Like this one where I told the AI to create a funny and sarcastic video about the differences between the imperial and the metric system. Keep in mind that the AI created everything about this—the script, the videos, the images, everything. I only gave it a text prompt. And I think the results are pretty decent.
What you notice right away is that the text here is actually readable. AI usually has trouble generating images and videos with text on them, but this AI can handle it.
Let's check out the video.
Did you know the world is divided by two measurement systems? On one side we have the logical, easy-to-understand metric system. On the other we have the imperial system, where apparently someone decided that feet, stones, and cups were sensible units of measurement.
Okay, this was about one quarter of the video. As you can see it added some sarcastic humor like I told it, and it generated different images and also videos to create a coherent story. So this clip for example is AI-generated, and we have a bunch of these different clips throughout this video.
Let's take a look at another one. Here I gave it the prompt to make a video with five little-known facts about Batman—and again the AI wrote everything starting from the script all the way to the final video.
Let's check out this one as well.
Get ready for the top five little-known facts about Batman. Number five: Batman's first appearance wasn't in a comic book but in a detective story. Number four: The Batcave was originally just a red barn. Number three: Batman once had a dog sidekick named Ace the Bat-Hound. Number two: In some versions Batman's cape is bulletproof and fireproof. And number one: Batman was almost killed off in the 1960s due to declining sales.
Yeah, the ending is a bit abrupt. I think for the best results you want to provide a custom script to make sure it's complete and just let the AI generate video clips—but I think this looks really good, and of course this AI will just improve in the future.
Now these videos are a bit hit-or-miss. Some of them look weird, but some of them are really good and you could post them as they are on some social media account.
Let's create one together. For this we click on this plus: generate complete video from script or topic. And here we can select a template, which are some presets—for example we can select cinematic if this is how we want our video to look.
We can either provide a complete script or we can tell the AI a topic to write a script about. I'm going to let the AI write one, and I told it to write an engaging and award-winning but also funny and sarcastic script about a vegan doing vegan things and getting into trouble because of it. Make the story coherent from beginning to end and add a satisfying plot and closure. You can be as exact and as detailed as you want here.
And then we can set a video description—let's set this to 60 seconds.
Here we can select what kind of media we want to have in our video. We want to have AI-generated videos in there of course, but we also have other options like AI images, stock video—which is not AI-generated; this is coming from some stock website—and this also costs fewer credits per second than AI-generated video, which makes sense because this doesn't require an AI to run, right.
But when we selected cinematic previously, this already configured this. We can change this if we want, but we can also leave it because we want AI-generated videos.
The art style is described down here. Again this is prefilled for us but we can modify this if we want—this is where you describe how you want your AI videos to look: realistic or comic style. You can be really creative here, but we want to keep the presets.
And then we have this field for the editor notes. This is also very important because here we can tell the AI how our video should look—what should happen at which point in time, how the cameras should move, what kinds of shots we want, even what kind of sound effects we want to have in there and transitions. Again you can be really creative and detailed here, but this was already prefilled by the cinematic preset that we picked earlier—start with a high-quality video using a wide shot with deep focus from a bird's-eye view shot, blah blah blah—and it goes on like this for a few paragraphs. Again you can go in here and modify this or just keep it as it is.
And then we can provide up to four images of a person or character that we want to have in our story. This is useful to create a coherent story where the character actually looks the same in each scene. I'm going to make myself the main character of this video by providing some images of myself. I already know that the AI doesn't get my face quite right, but we will have a coherent character—so let's try this out.
Then for the name I'm going to call it FL on the Vegan—and main character of the story.
We can set orientation of the video—let's make it landscape so it will be a horizontal video.
We can disable the captions if we want but I want to keep them—maybe select this option.
Then we can select a voice for the narrator—I'm going to keep the default here. You can try out these different options.
And the AI even generates the background music, which we can describe here—a soft orchestral soundtrack. Maybe let's change this to a soft, funnier and goofier and happier soundtrack to fit our story.
Describe the audience: everyone, but especially people who make fun of veganism.
Let's try this out. We generate this video—and this takes around three to six minutes to finish.
By the way, this is how the AI recreated my face earlier. I know that there are some similarities, but I really hope that I don't look like this. So I assume it will also not look one hundred percent exact in our new vegan video.
And there we go—it looks the same as the other two guys. I guess this is how it looks if it comes up with the same image over and over again.
Let's check out the video. It's actually longer than 60 seconds—as you can see it's more than one and a half minutes—because if the AI can't fit the whole story into 60 seconds it won't cut it off in the middle; it will just keep going as long as necessary.
So let's watch the video together.
Meet Florian, a dedicated vegan on a mission to save the world one plant at a time. So—those are all AI-generated videos; keep this in mind, this is not stock footage. His day starts with a kale smoothie and a yoga session in the park, where he accidentally knocks over a hot dog cart while attempting a warrior pose.
Undeterred, Florian heads to the farmers' market. Notice that the effects in the background are AI-generated too—like this crowd you hear in the background. Armed with his reusable bags and a superiority complex, he lectures an elderly woman—and it always uses the same face, which is supposed to be my face throughout the story, which is important to create a coherent story, and you achieve this by uploading an image of a character—just make sure it's someone you actually have permission to use, like yourself—about the environmental impact of her cheese purchase, only to slip on a stray grape and face-plant into a pile of organic zucchini.
At work Florian organizes a vegan potluck, but his tofu surprise clears the office faster than a fire drill.
Determined to spread awareness, he stages a one-man protest outside a steakhouse—but his cardboard sign dissolves in the rain, leaving him soaked and smelling like wet spinach.
As the day ends Florian realizes his zealous approach might be counterproductive. He decides to lead by example instead, starting by helping clean up the park he disrupted earlier. To his surprise he bonds with the hot dog vendor over their shared love for the environment, finding common ground in an unexpected place. Florian learns that change comes not from judgment but from understanding and collaboration—even if it means occasionally sharing space with a, gasp, meat-based business.
Awesome. So again, for the best results you probably want to provide your own script, but I think for AI-generated text this was pretty good.
Now we can download this video, but we can also edit it via this edit button, which brings us to a fully blown video editor—and here are also all the AI-generated clips. Here we have a lot of control because we can take certain parts of the video that we didn't like and replace them, for example with new AI-generated clips.
Let's say for example we didn't like this image because the text is not really readable. We can remove this clip here and instead tell the AI to generate a new one.
Here we can decide what we want to put in here—visuals or a sound effect or music. We want to put a new video clip in here. We could also generate an image, but we want to generate a new video clip with a duration of—how long do we need—yeah, five seconds should be about right. So we can select five seconds here, landscape mode.
This is the engine we want to use—Kling 1.6 is correct—and then we can tell it what we want to show here.
If I type in Florian I'm not sure if it will recognize the character—let's try this out: Florian protesting in front of a steakhouse. Maybe protesting alone in front of a steakhouse.
Then we can click on generate to generate this video clip. How many credits this costs and how long this takes depends of course on the duration of the clip, what engine you use, and so on.
Okay—it did not recognize me; it created a new character, and the text on the sign is also not really readable. Yeah, so I'm not sure how to achieve the same character when we create a smaller clip in the video editor—this might not be possible yet.
Let's insert the previous clip again, which was this one.
And let's try AI edit together—maybe this one works better. Here we can just describe what we want to change. Maybe let's try: at the 50-second mark make sure the sign is readable—but I have the suspicion that we will not get readable text here, but let's still try to change the scene.
So I'm going to write: at 0:50 Florian should stand in front of a steakhouse with an angry look on his face holding up a sign saying stop eating meat.
Let's give this a try.
So after processing for a few seconds the AI decided to create a new video clip. Let's see what we get.
Ah cool—and it even says generating video clip placing at 50 seconds—so it recognized the correct position; this is really cool.
Let's see how the result looks.
Okay—it has finished generating the video clip but it still hasn't placed the clip at the correct position. Yes—let's see—it just removed the previous clip but it's still processing, checking progress—and now it should place this new clip at this position.
But this is still a new character so it didn't work one hundred percent, and the sign is not readable, and we have a little gap here which is of course not great—so this doesn't work properly yet, but I hope they will improve this in the future.
Yeah—this is the new clip we got: one-man protest outside a steakhouse.
But a really cool feature that works is image-to-video, where we can give the AI a starting frame—a starting image to work with—and then continue the scene by turning it into a video.
I have prepared something to show you: this here, this video of me playing a guitar, which I created in the editor.
To start from scratch with a completely new project without any generations you can use this button here: explore from scratch in the editor. This brings you to this editor, and here you can generate whatever videos and images you want.
As you can see from the first frame of this clip I gave the AI this image to start with—which is an image I made for my thumbnails—and the AI then generated the rest of the video.
So let's check this out—so again the first frame looks exactly like the image, and I told the AI that I want to pull out a guitar and start playing.
There we go—my face looks a bit weird; this was the first clip it generated, which is ten seconds long.
And then I wanted to have a second clip that starts seamlessly at the end of the first clip. The way I achieved this is that I made a screenshot of the last clip—so I just made a screenshot of this exact moment, the last frame of the first clip—I saved this on my computer, and then I used image-to-video again and used this last frame as the starting image of the next clip.
So this is how I got a second clip which seamlessly starts at the end of the first clip—so if I continue playing this it keeps going on playing the guitar until eventually I stand up and go away.
Maybe let's try adding another five seconds to this clip.
So I select image-to-video, set the duration to five seconds, and then I need a frame to start with—and again I want to use the last frame of the previous clip.
So I maximize this, I make a screenshot of this—which you can do on every operating system—save this on my PC, and then we click on browse to upload the screenshot.
Okay—so I want to create a new five-second clip starting with the screenshot. Let's try this out.
Oh—and we have to give it a prompt—I forgot about this—what should happen in this clip.
The room is already empty so maybe let's write: everything should go up in flames—I don't know, whatever.
Generate—and now it's generating a new AI video clip.
You can also add music and sound effects and text to make this a complete video.
Okay—our clip is finished—let's see how this looks.
So I drag this here onto our timeline—and this should now continue the previous scene—so let's start over here where I stand up, I go away, next clip—and everything starts going up in flames.
Awesome—it's only five seconds long. We can also make longer clips up to ten seconds or continue at the last frame like I showed you—so if you are willing to put in the time you can generate some really cool stuff this way—complete videos.
But the easiest approach is to have the AI do everything from script writing to coming up with the characters and creating one coherent story with AI-generated videos.
So you can try this out with these different presets—again the link to the tool is in the video description below if you want to try this out yourself.
Please leave a like on this video if this was helpful and subscribe to the channel for more AI tool reviews in the future—and then we'll see us in the next video. Take care.
Standout features
What it's great for
- Create short social videos from a written idea or topic
- Turn a custom script into a narrated AI video with matching visuals
- Generate story-based videos with recurring characters from reference images
- Animate thumbnail images, portraits, or still scenes into short clips
- Prototype video concepts before spending time on manual editing or filming
- Replace individual weak clips inside an AI-generated video instead of regenerating everything
Pros & cons
Best for
Verdict
AIVideo is strongest when you want an all-in-one AI video workflow and are willing to guide it with a strong prompt or custom script. It can create surprisingly coherent short videos, but the output still benefits from human review, targeted clip replacement, and careful use of reference images for character consistency.
FAQ
Can AIVideo make a complete video from only a prompt?
Yes. You can provide a topic and let AIVideo generate the script, scenes, visuals, narration, captions, music, and sound effects. For stronger endings and a more controlled story, a custom script is usually the better starting point.
Can AIVideo turn images into videos?
Yes. Its image-to-video workflow uses an uploaded image as the first frame and animates the scene from there. For longer sequences, you can use the last frame of one generated clip as the starting image for the next clip.
Does AIVideo keep characters consistent?
It can use uploaded reference images to keep a character broadly consistent across a generated story. The likeness may not be exact, and creating new replacement clips later may not always preserve the same character.
Can I edit a generated AIVideo project?
Yes. Generated videos can be opened in the built-in editor, where you can replace clips, add new AI-generated video or images, insert sound effects or music, and adjust the timeline before downloading.
Is AIVideo good enough for finished social media posts?
Some generations can be good enough to post after review, especially for short social clips. Expect to regenerate or edit weaker scenes, and do not rely on it for perfect text, exact likenesses, or fully polished story structure without human input.
