Summary is the planning surface of a project. Lay down the period, a one-line pitch, and a three-act outline, then drop a few references. The page keeps the tone in front of you while you write in Scenario.Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.lettherebe.app/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Fields on this page do not influence shot generation. Treat Summary as a writer’s notebook. The values that shape rendered shots live on assets and on each line in Scenario.
Six story fields
The page opens with six text fields. Three acts plus an era and a logline form the spine.| Field | What it holds |
|---|---|
Era | Time period, world, or genre — 1920s, near-future, medieval |
Logline | The story in one sentence |
Introduction | Setup — characters and world |
Development | Rising action — tension and stakes |
Turning Point | The decisive moment that pivots into the climax |
Conclusion | Resolution and aftermath |
Era saves to the project itself and travels with every shot. The other five fields save to the project summary and stay on this page.
Every asset in one view
Below the fields, three sections list every Character, Subject, and Set registered in the project. The cards mirror what@ and / register inside Scenario — the same identity that locks faces and locations across cuts.
Add a new asset directly from this page. Each section ends with a chip button.
| Chip | Adds |
|---|---|
+ new character | A person (face held by front, side, full-body refs) |
+ new subject | A prop or recurring object |
+ new set | A place — four camera angles auto-generated |
Reference gallery
The last section is a free-form image board. Paste or upload screenshots, mood boards, or shots you want the project to chase. The gallery sits next to the asset sections so the reference frame stays one scroll away while you draft. References are visual memory only — they do not feed any model. Use Character or Subject assets when you want a reference to actually influence the generated frame.When to fill it in
Summary is optional. Skip it on a one-line test, return to it when the project grows past a few scenes.Before writing
Sketch the era and logline. The acts stay empty until later — they often only come into focus mid-draft.
Mid-draft check-in
Open Summary when a scene starts drifting in tone. Re-reading the logline pulls the next line back into shape.
Next
Scenario
Write line by line. Each line becomes one beat.
Characters
Register a person — face holds across every shot.