Sign in
Faceless video engine

Generate faceless videos for every platform, programmatically.

One API call turns a script into scenes, AI voiceover, visuals and a beat-synced render — in any aspect ratio. Vertical, square or wide.

Renders for
TikTokReelsShortsYouTubeLinkedIn
POST /v1/jobs
AI-first

Build faceless content with AI.

Every step is a model call — scripting, voice, visuals, the cut. You bring the idea; the engine writes, narrates, illustrates and renders it.

  • AI does the whole pipeline

    Scene-splitting, narration, imagery and the beat-synced edit — all generated, no timeline to touch.

  • Built for agents

    A clean JSON API your agent can plan around. One call in, a ready-to-post video out.

  • Native MCP server

    Drive the engine straight from Claude, Cursor or any MCP client — create_short, check balance, fetch the result.

Start today — free2,500 tokens on sign-up. No card required.
MCP · clipfoundry

One pipeline, every step automated.

Submit a topic, get back a ready-to-post video — sized for the platform you're targeting.

Scene splitter

Hook + 3–5 beats + payoff. Pacing tuned for the retention curves we measure on real short-form video.

Multi-voice TTS

Studio-quality AI voices, with timestamped alignment so captions land on the right syllable.

Image generation

Style-locked Flux or SDXL per scene. Backgrounds, B-roll, fully faceless visuals.

Beat-synced render

Studio-grade render with music-bed cuts and motion that matches the beat.

Resumable jobs

If a step fails halfway, we resume from the last checkpoint. No re-billing for completed work.

Cost-safe

You see tokens. We absorb provider price swings. Your bill stays predictable.

See it in motion

Real shorts from the engine — and the single prompt behind each one. Hover any clip to preview it.

cinematic
16:9
53s

The night the war stopped

Flagship 16:9 cinematic short — the 1914 Christmas Truce. Rendered at the cinematic quality tier (multi-candidate visuals, mastered audio). Voice: George.

See the full short
How it was generated

The day the dinosaurs died

Flagship cinematic short — the Chicxulub impact, 8 scenes. Voice: George.

The prompt

Sixty-six million years ago, the sky tore open. A streak of light brighter than the sun screamed across the heavens. A city-sized asteroid, ten kilometers wide, was about to end the age of the dinosaurs. It struck what is now Mexico at twenty kilometers per second. The impact released more energy than a billion atomic bombs, carving a crater a hundred and eighty kilometers across. A wall of fire swept over the continents, setting forests ablaze on the far side of the planet. Tsunamis taller than mountains raced around the globe. Molten rock rained from the sky. Then the world went dark. Soot and dust smothered the sun for years, and Earth plunged into a frozen night. The plants died. The food chain collapsed. Three quarters of all life vanished. But in the ruins, tiny mammals survived — and from the ashes of the dinosaurs, our world began.

Style
cinematic
Voice
George
Duration
52s
Scenes
8
How it was generated

The octopus brain

Cinematic science short on distributed cognition — 7 scenes. Voice: Adam.

The prompt

Your brain sits in your head. An octopus's brain is everywhere. Of its half a billion neurons, two thirds are not in its head, but in its arms. Each arm has its own memory, its own sense of taste, and its own will. It can touch, hunt, and make decisions even when it is cut off from the central brain. Sever one, and it will still reach for food and pass it toward where the head used to be. This is not a single mind. It is eight semi-independent minds that negotiate every move between them. An octopus can open jars, escape from sealed tanks, and recognize individual human faces. And its skin can sense light, even though there are no eyes in it. We have met an alien intelligence — not in space, but in the depths of our own ocean. Evolution proved that a mind can be built in a completely different way.

Style
cinematic
Voice
Adam
Duration
57s
Scenes
7
How it was generated

The 1518 dancing plague

Mystery style — an unsolved historical horror, 8 scenes. Voice: Will.

The prompt

In 1518, people danced themselves to death. It began with one woman, Frau Troffea, who stepped into a street in Strasbourg and started to dance. There was no music. She did not stop. Within days, dozens had joined her, their bodies jerking as if possessed. Within a month, hundreds were caught in the frenzy. They danced through bleeding feet and broken bones. Some collapsed from strokes, heart attacks, and sheer exhaustion. The terrified authorities consulted physicians, who declared it a disease of hot blood, and prescribed more dancing. They built a stage. They hired musicians. It only made things worse. And then, as mysteriously as it had begun, the dancing stopped. Mass hysteria? Poisoning? A curse? Five centuries later, the dancing plague of 1518 remains one of history's strangest unsolved mysteries.

Style
mystery
Voice
Will
Duration
57s
Scenes
8
How it was generated

How bees see the world

Documentary style — the hidden UV world bees see, 6 scenes. Voice: Brian.

The prompt

A bee sees a world you will never see. Where your eyes detect three colors, a bee's detect ultraviolet — a band of light completely invisible to humans. Look at a flower. To you, it is a simple splash of yellow. But to a bee, that same flower blazes with hidden patterns: glowing bullseyes and dark landing strips that point straight to the nectar. Evolution painted these secret signals over millions of years, advertising in a channel only pollinators can tune into. Some flowers even glow with ultraviolet runway lights to guide a bee in to land. And bees see more than color — their eyes refresh so fast that our movies would look like a slideshow to them. The meadow you stroll through in silence is, to a bee, a dazzling, screaming billboard — a map of light written in a language your eyes were never built to read.

Style
documentary
Voice
Brian
Duration
48s
Scenes
6
How it was generated

Whales share culture

Lofi ambient short — whale song culture, 6 scenes. Voice: Alice, slow.

The prompt

Whales sing in dialects. Off the coast of Australia, a single pod of humpbacks will invent a brand-new song — a complex sequence of moans, cries, and rumbles that can last for hours. And then something remarkable happens. The song spreads. Pod by pod, it travels east across the entire Pacific Ocean, and within two years, thousands of whales are singing the very same tune. No one teaches them. There is no leader. They simply listen to one another across hundreds of miles of open water, and pass the melody on. Each year, the old song fades and a new one rises to take its place, like a hit single moving through the sea. The deepest voice on Earth, sharing a song across an entire ocean, just for the beauty of being heard.

Style
lofi
Voice
Alice
Duration
47s
Scenes
6

How it works

  1. 1
    POST /v1/jobs with a topic, style and aspect ratio.
  2. 2
    Subscribe to /v1/jobs/:id/events (SSE) to watch progress.
  3. 3
    Receive a signed CDN URL when status is done. Post it anywhere.

Ready to ship faceless video on autopilot?

Sign up with Google. 2,500 tokens on the house, no card required.

Start free