controlled production.
Managed production, not another tool. Not a prompt lab.
Deliverable defined. Review owner named.
Agencies, studios, brand teams. Continuity across cuts.
Run the pipeline on your systems.
Licensing. Internal teams. Deployment constraints.
Not a prompt lab.
No vague briefs. No open-ended revision. No undefined deliverables.
the ad proves control. the walk proves production range.
the deterministic cut โ compact branded ad proving controlled continuity and character lock.
the walk โ narrative film proving the same engine sustains mood, reveal, and visual escalation.
frame, story, and review control.
AI video is stochastic. Every frame a coin flip. Telos is deterministic. You direct. The engine executes.
- temporal logic: enforced
- character persistence: locked
- visual constraints: locked before delivery
not a clip generator. a production system.
telos run --plan walk_v2
cast done
refine done
shoot 8 shots
compose pending
review pending
deliver pending
character_lock enabled
continuity strict
format sequence Without a real artifact, deterministic production is just a slogan.
choose the deliverable class before you submit the brief.
how is this different from runway or sora?
They generate clips. Telos produces cinema. Character persistence, continuity, review ownership.
how long does production take?
Spot: days. Sequence: weeks. Timeline scoped before work starts.
who owns the output?
You do. Once delivered, it's yours.
what do i need to start?
Deliverable type, timeline, reference work. The more specific, the more precise.
scope the right production lane
Send deliverable type, timeline, and reference work. We reply with the pilot path and handoff format.