Tarantino Diner Shootout Miniature
A highly detailed miniature scene depicting a chaotic shootout in a 1970s diner, styled after Quentin Tarantino's films. Features gangsters, a waitress, neon lights, and cinematic lighting.
Highly detailed miniature scene in the style of a Quentin Tarantino film. A chaotic shootout inside a 1970s American diner. Two gangsters in black suits are firing handguns at each other across the restaurant. One is behind an overturned table, the other is crouched behind the counter. Bullet holes are visible in the walls and windows. A waitress in a pink uniform lies on the floor, while another customer hides under a booth. Broken plates, spilled food, and splatters of blood are scattered across the checkered floor. A vintage jukebox stands in the corner with records flying out. Strong cinematic lighting with harsh overhead fluorescent lights mixed with warm neon signs. Heavy smoke and flying debris frozen mid-air. Extremely detailed miniature scale, realistic textures on clothing, food, metal, and wood. Moody, gritty, and stylish atmosphere with high contrast. Shot with shallow depth of field, realistic miniature photography, intricate details, cinematic color grading.
Guide & Practical Tips
## How to use this prompt
Copy the prompt exactly as provided into Nano Banana (Gemini Flash Image) for best results. The prompt contains all necessary details: subject, action, environment, lighting, style, and format. For variations, adjust specific elements like the diner name, colors, or character positions.
## Best use cases
Ideal for social media posts (Instagram, Facebook) as a 4:5 format, or as a cinematic 16:9 banner. Also great for concept art, tabletop gaming diorama inspiration, or film study references.
## What to adjust
- Change the colors of the neon sign or waitress uniform.
- Swap the 1970s diner for a 1950s or 1980s setting.
- Adjust the level of gore by removing or adding blood splatters.
- Change camera angles: low angle or bird's eye view.
- For a cleaner look, reduce smoke and debris.
## Common mistakes
- Overloading the scene with too many details can lead to clutter; keep the composition balanced.
- Using conflicting lighting (e.g., bright sunlight with neon) may confuse the model.
- Not specifying miniature scale can result in a realistic full-size scene instead of a diorama.
## Variations
- Noir Version: Convert to black and white, add film grain and hard shadows.
- Comic Style: Add halftone dots and speech bubbles for a graphic novel look.
- Clean Version: Remove blood and damage, focus on the diner interior during a quiet moment.
- Wide Angle: Use a 16:9 aspect ratio for a cinematic widescreen shot.