Michael Haneke AI Videos

Direct the austere dread of Michael Haneke in your browser with Morphic's Haneke style AI video generator. Generate a static long take of a cool bourgeois living room, a symmetrical hallway holding perfectly still, or a family at a dinner table with the tension left just off-screen. Score it sparely with the Music tool, then keep every character on-model with the Character Lineup workflow.

Haneke style characters you can direct

Haneke style scenes you can stage

Static long take of a still living room

A cool symmetrical bourgeois living room held in one unbroken static take, two figures seated far apart saying nothing, only a clock ticking, the camera never moving.

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A dinner where the tension stays off-screen

A family seated at a formal dinner table in even light, cutlery clicking, someone speaking just outside the frame, every face composed while the air turns cold.

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An empty symmetrical hallway

A long clinical hallway framed dead centre, doors closed on both sides, one figure standing very still at the far end, nothing happening for an uncomfortable stretch.

Edit prompt

A window watched from inside

A dim living room in the foreground, a bright ordinary street framed through a large window, a figure watching motionless, the sense that they are being watched back.

Edit prompt

Make Haneke videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Haneke scene

    Write the Haneke scene you want, in plain words.

  2. 02

    Generate the video

    Morphic generates a cinematic, frame-ready clip on your canvas in seconds.

  3. 03

    Refine your Haneke video

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

Related workflows

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Simple pricing

Get started for free today, with the option to upgrade or cancel anytime.

Basic

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

900 monthly credits

1 user only

All models

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Standard

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

3200 monthly credits

1 user only

All models

Workflows

Pro

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

6200 shared monthly credits

1 user

+ up to 4 more at extra cost

All models

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Pro Max

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

24000 shared monthly credits

1 user

+ up to 9 more at extra cost

All models

Workflows

Enterprise

For higher limits

Custom

pricing and billing terms

Unlimited credits
Custom seat limits
All models
Workflows
Pricing Gradient

Free

For playing around

$0

forever free

Up to 20 credits
1 user only
Limited models
Workflows

FAQs

Where can I make Haneke style videos with AI?
You can create Haneke style scenes directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the static framing, the cool interior, and the off-screen tension, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What kinds of Haneke style scenes work best with AI video?
Contained interior scenes work best: a still living room, a formal dinner, an empty hallway, a window watched from inside. Keep the camera locked off and the action minimal so the discomfort builds from what is held back.
How do I get the clinical look for Haneke style videos?
Ask for a static locked-off camera, dead-centre symmetrical framing, cool even daylight, and muted bourgeois interiors. Long unbroken takes with almost no camera movement give the frame its trademark clinical stillness.
How do I keep a character consistent across Haneke style scenes?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock the outfit, hair, and proportions, then reference that card in every prompt. Morphic keeps the same composed patriarch or tense homemaker on-model from a dinner table to an empty hallway.
Can I add narration and music to my Haneke style videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates a restrained voiceover from your script, and the Music tool produces an original score. Sparse solo piano or long stretches of pure ambient silence sit cleanly inside the Haneke palette.
How do I build tension off-screen in a Haneke style scene?
Point the frame away from the event. Describe a sound coming from another room, a figure reacting to something outside the frame, or a held stillness after an action, and let the viewer imagine what you never show.