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Framesail AI

Anime AI video generator, same look to the last shot.

An AI anime video generator earns it at shot 80, not shot 1 — the test is whether the look holds. Framesail defines your anime style once, locks your characters as references, and renders every shot of a long-form video against both.

Cel-shaded anime frame generated from Framesail's anime style preset — a fox in a suit presenting a rising sales chart in a sunlit office
Generated straight from the built-in anime preset — one style definition that every shot in a project renders against.

What it is

A style the pipeline holds, not a prompt suffix.

What it is

One style definition — linework, shading, lighting, palette — written into the project, plus your characters locked as reference assets. Every shot is rendered against both, so shot 3 and shot 80 answer to the same anime.

What it isn't

Typing “anime style” into a video model. Prompt-suffix anime drifts — a fresh interpretation per clip, faces that migrate, palettes that reset. Fine for one clip; fatal for an episode.

Style DNA

Your anime, defined once.

“Anime” isn't one look — 90s cel grain and modern digital gloss are different animals. So the style is yours to set, two ways.

Start from the preset

The built-in anime look.

A cel-shaded preset — expressive eyes, dramatic lighting, clean linework, lush skies — ready the moment you create a channel. The hero frame above is a straight generation from it. Even the on-screen titles carry the look.

Or match references

Analyze the anime you actually want.

Paste videos or images in the look you're after and style analysis extracts the art style, narrative voice, and editing rhythm into a reusable definition. That's the difference between an anime AI video generator that outputs someone else's look and one that outputs yours.

One style definition,

every shot answers to it.

Locked characters

On-model at shot one. On-model at shot eighty.

Anime lives on its characters, and character drift is what gives AI anime away — the jawline that shifts between scenes, the hair that changes color mid-episode. Framesail renders each character once in your style, locks the result as a reference asset, and hands that reference to every shot they appear in.

The model never has to remember your protagonist — it's shown them, every single time. The full mechanics are on the character consistency page.

How an episode gets made

An episode workflow, not a clip machine.

The same script-to-video pipeline behind everything Framesail renders, with your anime style riding along at every stage.

  1. 01

    Script

    Write it or generate it. The script is scanned for every character and environment it mentions — that list becomes the project's cast and sets.

  2. 02

    References

    Each character and set is rendered once in your anime style and locked as a reference asset. This is the step that decides whether shot 80 matches shot 1.

  3. 03

    Storyboard

    The script becomes a shot list timed to the voiceover — every beat gets a shot, and every shot knows which locked references it must render against.

  4. 04

    Motion

    Each shot animates on the video model you pick — smooth cel-style motion from a still that already carries your style — then the whole thing exports as a clean MP4.

Model stack

Your look, frontier motion.

The style is yours; the engines are swappable. Every stage runs on a named frontier model you can see and change.

Script

3 providers
OpenAI logo

GPT-5.4

OpenAI

Swap model

Image

2 providers
Google logo

Nano Banana Pro

Google

Swap model

Video

5 providers
ByteDance logo

Seedance 2 Pro

ByteDance

Swap model

Gemini Omni logoGemini Omnisoon

Voice

2 providers
ElevenLabs logo

ElevenLabs v3

ElevenLabs

Swap model

The field moves fast — as new frontier models ship, they land right here.

Your stack

GPT-5.4 · Nano Banana Pro · Seedance 2 Pro · ElevenLabs v3

Try your stack

Beyond anime

Anime is one style. It isn't the only one.

The same style-holding architecture runs every look in the catalog — and some looks change the technique too. For handmade motion there's AI stop motion animation, built from chained stills instead of video models, and its clay-textured sibling, claymation. The full catalog — eleven curated presets, plus a style analyzed from any reference video and made your own — is on the styles page.

Questions

AI anime video generator, answered straight.

Can it match my specific anime style?

Two paths. The fast one is the built-in anime preset — a cel-shaded look with expressive eyes, dramatic lighting, clean linework, and lush skies. The precise one is style analysis: paste reference videos or images in the look you want, and the analysis extracts the art style, narrative voice, and editing rhythm into a reusable style your whole channel renders against.

Do characters stay on-model across a whole video?

Yes — that's the architecture, not a setting. Every character is rendered once in your anime style and locked as a reference asset, and every shot that features them is generated against that reference. The model is never asked to remember a face from three shots ago; it's handed the reference every time.

Which models actually generate the motion?

Real, named ones you pick per project: Seedance 2 Pro, Veo 3.1, Kling v3, Hailuo 2.3, and Wan 2.7 for video, with stills rendered on image models like GPT Image 2 and Gemini 3 Pro. The style comes from your locked definition; the model is just the engine underneath it.

Can I make a full episode, not just a clip?

That's what the pipeline is for. Script, voiceover, storyboard, per-shot generation, and final export run as one long-form production — multi-minute videos, not eight-second clips. For story-driven work there's a narrative-with-dialogue mode, with distinct voices per character.

Is an anime AI video generator different from a regular AI video tool?

The honest difference is memory. A general anime AI video generator gives you one good clip at a time, and each clip reinterprets the style. Holding one anime look across eighty shots — same linework, same palette, same faces — takes a style definition and locked references that every shot answers to. That's the part Framesail is built around.

More on the main FAQ page.

Make the anime you keep storyboarding.

Script to final episode, one look from the first shot to the last.