A film title is the first frame an audience sees, often months before the trailer, so it has to land the tone in two or three words. This tool draws on the title patterns that recur across cinema and assembles genre-matched options you can shortlist in seconds.
How it works
Each generated title is built from genre-specific word pools so the tone matches the film. The generator picks a genre, then chooses words only from that genre’s lists. About 35 percent produce an adjective-plus-noun title such as Lethal Vendetta, around 30 percent produce a The <Noun> title, roughly 20 percent add a colon subtitle such as Hollow: Comes at Night, and the rest pair a noun with a closing phrase. Drama leans on quiet, intimate words, action on high-stakes verbs, horror on dread, comedy on mishaps, and documentary on weighty single nouns. Results are de-duplicated within each batch.
Tips and notes
- The most memorable titles are short and concrete; a two-word title fits a poster and a marquee far better than a long phrase.
- A colon subtitle is useful for sequels and franchises, but it can feel generic for a standalone film, so use it deliberately.
- Film titles are not individually copyrightable, but a famous match invites confusion and legal friction, so always search before locking a title.