Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme snowboarding video. REFERENCE USA
Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme snowboarding video. REFERENCE USAGE: Image 1 = strict identity, outfit, and snowboard reference. Preserve her exact face, pale skin, blue eyes, long straight black hair, body proportions, feminine snowboarding outfit (fitted insulated jacket, snow pants, gloves, goggles on helmet), and the same snowboard design. Do NOT change her identity, outfit, or snowboard. She must feel like a real person performing dangerous but believable professional snowboarding action. SETTING: Steep alpine mountain face in bright daylight, fresh deep powder snow, dramatic jagged peaks in the background, strong sunlight with lens flares, flying snow spray, and a powerful cinematic atmosphere. The environment should feel fast, raw, thrilling, and realistic. VIDEO STYLE: One continuous 15-second shot, absolutely no cuts, no hidden cuts, no transitions, and no montage. Hyper-realistic action, natural motion blur, snow particles on lens, heavy powder spray, rushing wind sound, board carving noise, and believable body-weight corrections. The shot must feel immersive and physically real. OPENING SHOT: She is already carving down the slope when the video begins. The camera starts very close in front of her, focused mainly on her upper body and face. Her long black hair whips in the wind beneath her helmet, her expression is calm, fearless, and focused, and powdery snow flies dynamically around her. CAMERA MOVEMENT: The camera begins briefly in front of her upper body, then in one smooth uninterrupted move swings around her body to the back. As soon as it reaches behind her, it drops low to snowboard level and stays there for the rest of the entire video. From that moment on, the camera must always remain very close to the snowboard, low near the snow surface, following from behind and slightly below or slightly offset near the tail. It must never rise to a high angle. It should always feel like it is chasing the snowboard from behind at board height. ACTION FLOW: Once the camera settles behind her at snowboard level, she lowers into a deep athletic crouch and accelerates hard down the steep face. She leans aggressively into turns, carving through deep powder and throwing massive rooster-tail sprays backward toward the low camera. The board slices powerfully through the snow while the camera stays locked close behind it. She then builds more speed toward a natural kicker (snow jump) and performs an acrobatic aerial move. She launches off the lip with the snowboard beneath her feet, and the entire jump remains in the same continuous shot with no cut. During the airborne moment, time shifts into dramatic slow motion while the camera still stays low, close, and near snowboard level, following from behind and slightly underneath the action. While in the air, she rotates her upper body toward the camera, faces us, and grabs the snowboard with one hand (melancholy or method grab), completing the aerial in a stylish and impressive pose. Her hair lifts in the wind, snow crystals hang suspended in the air, and the board remains clearly visible. She then completes the rotation naturally, lands cleanly in the powder with a massive burst of snow spray. The camera remains low behind the snowboard, still at board height, and follows the impact closely. After landing, she stays crouched, keeps one smooth flowing line, and accelerates again toward the next steep section and rising terrain ahead. FINAL MOMENT: She continues charging forward at high speed, still viewed from the same uninterrupted low trailing angle behind the snowboard, with powder exploding around the lens and the next drop growing larger ahead. The video ends while she is still racing down the mountain in the same continuous single take. No text, no logos, no subtitles.
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