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Filmmakers Flock to Kling 2.0 for Next-Level AI Video Generation
Key Takeaways
- Kling 2.0 can generate videos up to 2 minutes long with smoother motion, better visuals, and improved prompt handling;
- Creators are spending big to test Kling 2.0, praising its realistic camera movement and precise output quality;
- Despite strong features, rendering takes time—free users may wait hours, and even paid plans can take 16 minutes for 5 seconds of video.
The Chinese tech firm Kuaishou has launched Kling 2.0, a new version of its artificial intelligence (AI) powered video tool, and it is already drawing attention from creators and filmmakers.
Many filmmakers, marketers, and online content creators have started exploring Kling 2.0 because of its focus on high-quality visuals, with some spending large amounts to explore what it can do.
Pierrick Chevallier, an AI VFX prompt artist and Photoshop editor, posted on X, saying, "The camera movement possibilities in Kling 2.0 are absolutely crazy".
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Additionally, filmmaker PJ Ace said in a post on X that he spent $1,250 on credits and was impressed by how accurate the tool is and how smooth the motion looks.
This latest version builds on the earlier Kling 1.6 and offers several key upgrades. It can now create videos up to two minutes long, and it shows a better understanding of prompts, improved visuals, and more natural movement in scenes.
Kling 2.0 features a tool that allows users to edit videos by adding, removing, or swapping elements using text or image input. It also introduces two main tools: Kling 2.0 Master, which handles video generation, and Kolors 2.0, which focuses on creating still images.
However, generating a short video takes time. On the free plan, users may wait hours to receive results. Even paid users on browser-based platforms report needing up to 16 minutes to produce five seconds of footage.
On April 14, Google introduced an AI-powered tool that communicates like dolphins. How does it work? Read the full story.