Look — Fictional Movie Poster
Type a movie idea. Get a fake-but-believable theatrical one-sheet — eight genres × four eras, with the right typography for each.
A theatrical one-sheet for a movie that doesn't exist. Type a title, pick a genre and an era, and the model produces a real-looking theatrical poster: title typography, tagline, key art, optional festival laurels and release line. Eight genres × four eras = 32 combinations, each with binding visual rules so a 2020s prestige war epic doesn't look like a 1990s blockbuster romcom and a Studio-Ghibli wuxia doesn't look like a 1970s grindhouse horror.

What you bring
- A movie title — Hollow Coast, Voltage, The Scarlet Mountain, House of Gristle. Renders as the typographic hero.
- A genre — sci-fi, dark fantasy, romcom, war epic, animated family, horror, wuxia, crime thriller. Determines the key-art language.
- An era — 1970s grindhouse, 1990s blockbuster, 2020s prestige, Studio-Ghibli anime. Determines typography and poster-treatment register.
Optionally: a tagline and a release line. Leave them blank and the model picks a tagline that fits the genre.
What you get back
A poster you'd put behind glass in a cinema lobby. Title hero, tagline, key art tuned to genre, era-correct typography (chrome and embossed for 90s, refined and minimal for 2020s prestige, halftone-and-grain for 1970s grindhouse, painterly hand-lettered for Studio Ghibli), restrained festival laurels, release line, small studio attribution, dense believable credit block at the foot.
No real IP, no real faces
The Look is for fictional films only. The prompt explicitly forbids real-celebrity faces and existing-IP titles or characters — Star Wars, Marvel, the actual Studio Ghibli filmography, etc. Type your own title and let the model invent the world.
Cost & timing
8 credits per run. Roughly 60 seconds. With your 20 signup credits you get two before topping up.
Inspired by @Design4p0 on X — the most developed of the movie-poster prompts in the source repo, with full theatrical structure: tagline, awards laurels, quote, release line, studio attribution. Earlier minimal cases by @seiiiiiiiiiiru and @underwoodxie96 framed the broader category. The eight-genre × four-era enforcement, slot scaffolding, and FORBIDDEN-cue blocks are FluxGen's.