Direct a crew on a job in your browser with Morphic's heist AI video generator. Generate heist video scenes like a crew assembling around a blueprint table, a safecracker against a vault door at 3am, or a getaway driver waiting in an idling sedan in a quiet alley, and pair them with the Speech and Music tools to layer a cool ensemble banter track and a propulsive caper score. Stitch the beats into a full heist short on the Canvas.

Heist characters you can direct

Heist scenes you can stage

Crew assembly around a blueprint table

A low-ceilinged back room with the crew gathered around a blueprint table under a single pendant lamp, a model of the target building at one end, smoke drifting in the bulb cone.

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Vault interior at 3am

The interior of a bank vault at 3am, gleaming steel deposit-box wall, a single safe door cracked open with the safecracker silhouette in the frame, a torch beam on the boxes.

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Rooftop approach across the skyline

Two figures in black tactical gear crossing a rain-slick rooftop with the city skyline behind, a thin rappel line over the edge, the target tower lit one window at a time.

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Getaway in a quiet alley

A dark narrow alley with an idling sedan, exhaust drifting, the driver checking the rearview, two crew members slipping in with duffles, a single neon sign throwing red on the wet brick.

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Make heist videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your heist scene

    Write the heist scene you want, including the moment, location, and camera direction.

  2. 02

    Generate the video

    Morphic generates a cinematic, frame-ready clip on your canvas in seconds, no editing software required.

  3. 03

    Refine your heist video

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the moment the shot lands.

Related workflows

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FAQs

Where can I make heist videos with AI?
You can create heist scenes directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the structural beat, the lighting, and the camera move, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What defines a heist video for an AI prompt?
Four things: a structural beat (assembly, break-in, approach, getaway, double-cross), a confined high-stakes setting (back room, vault, rooftop, alley), low single-source lighting (pendant lamp, penlight, neon), and a clear crew archetype in frame. Name all four for the scene to read as a heist.
What kinds of heist scenes work best with AI video?
Single-shot caper beats: the crew assembly around a blueprint table, the safecracker on the vault dial, the rooftop approach, the getaway in a quiet alley. Anchor each heist scene to one beat, one location, and one camera move.
How do I keep my heist crew consistent across scenes?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock the wardrobe and gear for each role (mastermind, safecracker, driver, hacker, muscle), then reference those cards in every prompt. Morphic preserves the crew across the assembly, the job, and the getaway.
How do I get a cool caper feel in a heist scene?
Use low single-source lighting, tight ensemble blocking around a single prop (blueprint, vault dial, briefcase), and an idling vehicle or ticking-clock detail off-frame. Name those props directly so Morphic centres the beat instead of generic action coverage.
Can I add ensemble banter and a caper score to my heist videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates cool low-stakes crew banter from your script, and the Music tool produces a propulsive plucked-bass-and-snare caper score. Layer both onto the generated clip to publish a complete heist short.