1. Classic Left Gradient
Most Netflix-like: strong left title block, media facts, play/edit actions, and a glass metadata shelf.
Each sample uses the same page content but explores a different cinematic hierarchy: play-first, metadata-first, multipart-first, editing-first, and gallery-first.
Most Netflix-like: strong left title block, media facts, play/edit actions, and a glass metadata shelf.
Lets the artwork breathe, with the UI collected at the bottom like a streaming detail overlay.
Hero stays immersive while a compact right inspector carries actionable metadata and organization.
A fixed panel gives a streaming-app feel while staying practical for metadata editing.
Designed for multi-part videos, with per-part chips always visible on the right.
More theatrical and less utilitarian, useful if the detail page should feel like a playback destination.
Hero plus a visible metadata dashboard; strongest when video facts are the star of the redesign.
Keeps the hero visual but gives edit/import/delete equal-width controls below the core identity.
Feels like a streaming player detail page with visual chapter/thumb placeholders along the bottom.
Opposite of the classic Netflix layout: full artwork with a right-side metadata dock for quick scanning.