If your shot must move forward through something (not just toward it), use a Flythrough Transition.
Camera moves continuously through an object, opening, or environment - passing “through” solid space into another scene, location, or void - maintaining directional motion and visual flow.
A Flythrough Transition is a smooth forward move where the camera looks like it passes through something and ends up in a new place.
It’s not just a cut. It creates the look of an ongoing trip, like a visual wormhole from one scene to the next.
It’s usually done with CGI, VFX, or AI to fake a space link that wouldn’t work in real life. It is a transition device: the movement itself is used to connect two separate shots so they feel like one uninterrupted spatial glide.
In AI prompts it means the camera moves forward and goes through a portal-like moment. Could be a mouth, window, keyhole, painting, or light tunnel. It links two different areas.
Famous live-action parallels:
Fight Club (1999) - camera flies through a garbage can and up to a building. The Great Gatsby (2013) - digital flythroughs across cityscape into party interiors. Doctor Strange (2016) - flythroughs into mirror dimensions. Being John Malkovich (1999) - into the mouth and down the tunnel.
Panic Room (2002), house-navigation shots. The camera seems to glide through walls, floors, and tight architectural spaces. It is a strong reference because the shot creates impossible movement that feels continuous, even when built from composited passes and digital stitching.
Sub-Variants
| Element | Behaviour |
|---|---|
| Subject | May stay centered briefly, then be left behind as the camera commits to the pass-through; sometimes the subject motivates the move by opening a door, crossing frame, or leading the viewer into the next space |
| Background / Environment | Rushes past camera, often becoming the main transition tool; walls, doorways, smoke, darkness, fabric, or foreground objects briefly dominate frame to conceal the cut |
| Motion / Effect | What it does | How it differs |
|---|---|---|
| Push-In | Camera simply moves closer to subject | A push-in stays within one shot; a flythrough transition uses movement to connect shots/scenes |
| Whip Pan Transition | Fast pan hides edit in motion blur | Whip pan relies on lateral blur; flythrough relies on forward passage through space/object |
| Dolly Zoom | Changes perspective and focal length for distortion | Dolly zoom is a perspective effect, not a scene-bridging transition |
Models often confuse this with a normal drone shot or forward dolly. The key is to specify that the camera passes through a foreground obstruction or opening and uses that moment to transform into a new location/scene.
Better phrasing:
“Seamless cinematic flythrough transition, camera pushes through a doorway/pillar/dark foreground, hidden cut during occlusion, emerges into a new space with continuous motion.”
| Effect Type | composite |
|---|---|
| Related Effects | Motion Blur Trail |
| Used in Contexts | narrative emphasis, reveal, stylized sequence |
| Effect Styles | dreamlike, experimental, realistic, stylized |