If you have ever generated a great shot, felt excited, moved on to the next panel, and watched your character turn into a completely different person... this module was built for you.
Module 3 is all about one word: Consistency.
- Character consistency
- Background consistency
- Prop consistency
- Wardrobe (clothes) consistency
- Style consistency
- Sound, Music, Voice Consistency
All of it, shot by shot, the way a real director controls a production.
Here is what you are walking into:
- You will build your Director's Reference System. Character reference sheets, prop reference sheets, wardrobe sheets. You will learn the exact prompts to generate them, and then use them as your source of truth across every panel you create. No more guessing. No more hoping the AI remembers what your character looked like three shots ago.
- You will learn to work with 3D environments for background consistency. Using Marble, you will scout virtual locations the way a real filmmaker scouts a set. You will find your angles, plan your shots, and create a background that stays consistent across the entire scene. You will even learn how to add elements directly into a 3D space using Nano Banana, and how to connect two separate 3D sets so your story moves seamlessly between locations.
- You will get a lesson that most tutorials completely skip. Your audience is smarter than you think. You do not need to show every single detail of the action. You do not need to animate a sword handoff, a transformation, or a complex object pass. You just need to show enough for the story to land. As a director, your job is to choose what people see, not to force the AI to do things it cannot do. This is one of the most freeing ideas in the whole course.
- You will learn which platforms let you reference specific images. Freepik, Galaxy, Higgsfield, Dzine, OpenArt. You will know exactly which tools support the kind of image-locked consistency workflow this module teaches.
By the end of Module 3, you will stop treating AI like a slot machine and start using it like a production department that takes direction.
Your characters will hold. Your backgrounds will hold.
Your props will hold. And your story will actually look like it was made by one person with a clear vision, because it was.
Jump in and let me know what you think in the comments below.