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Generative Image Maker Midjourney Joins the AI Video Craze

Midjourney can now create animated videos based on the images you input—if you pay.

 & Will McCurdy Contributor

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(Credit: Midjourney)

Midjourney is one of the most popular AI image generators out there, but it's now branching out into creating animated videos from static images, bringing it in line with rivals like Open AI’s Sora, Adobe’s Firefly, and Google’s Veo 3.

The tool, called V1, is currently only available to desktop users via Midjourney’s Discord app, and you’ll need to sign up for a subscription plan, which start at $10 per month.

midjourney

Users can press “Animate” to make their Midjourney-generated images move. V1 will then produce a set of four five-second videos based on whatever they input.

There are two animation settings you can pick from: "automatic" and "manual." With the “automatic” setting, the tool creates what the startup calls a “motion prompt” and “just makes things move.” But if you're after a bit more creative control, the “manual” animation button lets users describe how they want things to move and how the scene should develop.

(Credit: Midjourney)

V1 also offers two styles: high motion and low motion. In low motion, the camera stays mostly static while the subject moves slowly or deliberately. In high motion, both the subject and the camera move—though Midjourney admits that “all this motion can sometimes lead to wonky mistakes.”

In addition, users can animate images uploaded from outside of Midjourney. You’ll need to drag the image you want to animate into the prompt bar and mark it as a “start frame,” then type a motion prompt to describe how you want it to move. Once you have a video you'd like to hold on to, you can “extend” it, roughly four seconds at a time, up to four times total.

But turning your creative aspirations to video won’t come cheap: using Midjourney to generate video will cost eight times more than conventional image generation, meaning you burn through your monthly credits much faster than normal.

There’s also no guarantee of what the tool will ultimately end up costing at this early stage. Midjourney noted that the cost of running these models is “hard to predict,” and that it monitors how people use the service before adjusting pricing to ensure it’s running “a sustainable business.”

The new features come as Midjourney has plenty on its plate to deal with beyond product design. Last week, Universal and Disney sued the Bay Area start-up, claiming its business is "a bottomless pit of plagiarism," as a result of drawing from many of the studios' iconic productions for its imagery.

But lawsuits aren't stopping the startup from making highly ambitious pronouncements about the future of its tech. "We believe the inevitable destination of this technology is models capable of real-time open-world simulations," said a Midjourney spokesperson as part of the announcement.

About Our Expert

Will McCurdy

Will McCurdy

Contributor

I’m a reporter covering weekend news. Before joining PCMag in 2024, I picked up bylines in BBC News, The Guardian, The Times of London, The Daily Beast, Vice, Slate, Fast Company, The Evening Standard, The i, TechRadar, and Decrypt Media.

I’ve been a PC gamer since you had to install games from multiple CD-ROMs by hand. As a reporter, I’m passionate about the intersection of tech and human lives. I’ve covered everything from crypto scandals to the art world, as well as conspiracy theories, UK politics, and Russia and foreign affairs.

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