Create a realistic handheld-style vertical video at an outdoor covered skatepark during bright dayti
Prompt
Create a realistic handheld-style vertical video at an outdoor covered skatepark during bright daytime. The scene takes place inside a concrete skate bowl with curved ramps, a metal coping rail, and a raised deck area behind it. Sunlight blasts in from the open sides of the structure, creating a high-contrast look with bright trees and fencing in the background. The setting feels casual, real, and unscripted, like a phone-recorded skate clip. Use @video_1 as reference for the general body mechanics of the fall and the camera position. Use @image_1 as the visual reference for the skateboarder’s appearance. She is a young adult woman with long dark black hair parted near the center with soft volume, glamorous eye makeup, glossy nude lips, and a confident, stylish look. She is wearing the same black fitted cropped T-shirt with rhinestone “Baby” lettering, the same silver choker necklace, and black loose low-waisted pants exactly as shown in @image_1. She is wearing black Nike SB slides (with a wide padded strap, white Nike swoosh and “SB” logo on the front) on her bare feet. She rides up the curved concrete bowl toward the coping rail on her skateboard. Her long dark hair moves naturally as she skates. Another skater in dark clothing rolls casually along the deck in the background on quad skates, not involved in the trick. The skateboarder attempts to ride up the ramp and land on or over the metal coping rail, but she loses balance mid-movement. Her board slips away as her legs separate awkwardly over the rail. She lands on her groin painfully and embarrassingly onto the metal coping excatly like in @video_1, catching herself with both hands while her skateboard shoots out to the side. At the exact moment of impact, the force causes her Nike SB slides to slide off her feet and skid down the ramp. This detail should feel quick, accidental, and believable, adding to the realism and awkwardness of the fall. The moment should feel sudden, real, and physically uncomfortable. The awkward body position, the sharp impact sound, and her stunned reaction afterward. Immediately after the impact, emphasize a strong expression of pain. Her face tightens sharply, her brows pull together, her eyes squeeze shut or flutter in shock, and her mouth opens in a breathless gasp as the air is knocked out of her. Her head tilts back briefly, then she curls forward, tense and stunned. Her shoulders tighten, her whole body stiffens, and she looks visibly overwhelmed by the painful impact and embarrassed by the failed trick. The reaction should feel raw, involuntary, and physically believable. Her pain response should feel natural and grounded: a sharp inhale, a strained “uh,” a drawn-out groan, shaky breathing, and a quiet, pained whisper like “Oh my god…I think I broke something...” after the initial shock. The camera should linger briefly on her face after the impact so her pain and embarrassment are clearly visible. The footage is handheld vertical phone-style video, slightly shaky, with natural exposure shifts and casual imperfect framing. The person filming tracks her unevenly, staying close enough to capture the full fail and the immediate aftermath. After the impact, the camera naturally shifts closer toward her upper body and face to capture her reaction. Keep the motion realistic, with no slow motion, no dramatic music, and no polished commercial look. Sound Design: Use realistic skatepark audio captured like a phone recording. Include the rolling sound of skateboard wheels over smooth concrete, faint background ambience, distant skaters, subtle wind, and echo from the covered structure. As the trick goes wrong, add the sudden scrape of wheels sliding out, a sharp clank against the coping rail, and the hollow rattle of the board rolling away. At the instant of impact, include the soft slapping/skidding sound of the flip-flops coming loose and sliding down the ramp. At the moment of impact, include a short, sharp thud followed by a startled gasp and strained grunt. Her voice should sound involuntary and realistic: a breathless “uh,” a shaky groan, uneven breathing, and a soft, pained “Oh my god…” followed by a "I think I broke something" after a stunned pause. Keep all vocal reactions grounded in physical surprise, pain, and embarrassment, like an accidental skate fail caught on a phone. Negative prompt: No slow motion, no dramatic music, no exaggerated facial distortion, no cartoonish reaction, no unrealistic anatomy, no gore, no blood, no broken limbs, no overacting, no polished cinematic camerawork.