Use the uploaded images as the primary visual references. Image role: Image 1, Image 2, Image 3, I
Use the uploaded images as the primary visual references. Image role: Image 1, Image 2, Image 3, Image 4, and Image 5 are all character references. Randomly rotate the visible character among all five references throughout the clip. Do not rely only on Image 1. Do not merge all characters into one design. Keep each character visually recognizable according to its own reference. Across the 15-second clip, all five reference characters should appear repeatedly in a fast, random-feeling order. 15-second music-video style animation. Ultra cute hyper pop, visually explosive, chaotic, surreal kawaii motion collage. No lip-sync. No singing focus. Prioritize visual impact, diverse chaos, lens effects, rapid switching, and striking composition changes. Main direction: Create a dense, hyperactive, kawaii-chaotic visual sequence where the characters from Image 1–5 appear in rapid rotation inside an aggressively stylized pop-surreal world. The attraction is visual impact: fisheye distortion, lens warping, smash zooms, split-panel chaos, clone echoes, kaleidoscope effects, sticker explosions, sudden camera angle changes, and cute chaotic dance/reaction bursts. The clip should feel playful, overwhelming, stylish, and highly memorable. Highest priority: Visual impact. Varied chaos. Strong lens effects. Rapid switching. Character rotation across Image 1–5. Cute but intense energy. Readable silhouettes and faces. Motion direction: Use cute but wild movement: short dance bursts, sudden pose changes, hopping, spinning, flailing arms in a playful way, head tilts, bouncing, crowd-like rhythm, exaggerated reactions, and spontaneous mob-dance energy. No lip-sync focus. Motion should feel energetic, slightly unhinged, rhythmic, and visually surprising. Chaos direction: Use many different kinds of chaos within one clip: fisheye lens distortion, ultra-wide lens warping, crash zooms, whip pans, dutch angles, rapid perspective shifts, kaleidoscopic mirroring, multi-panel fragmentation, repeated clones, echo trails, layered collage composition, sticker explosions, frame-within-frame effects, sudden close-up distortion, stretch-and-squash motion, graphic shock cuts, pop-art visual overload. Each few beats should feel visually different. Lens / camera effects: Strong fisheye close-ups. Wide-angle perspective exaggeration. Sudden zoom-ins and zoom-outs. Tilted framing. Quick rotations. Orbiting camera feel. Tunnel-like lens distortion. Occasional extreme close-up facial distortion in a cute, playful way. Use lens effects for impact, not realism. Visual style: Pastel neon palette, pink, cyan, lemon yellow, mint, lavender, plus occasional bold accent bursts. Bold outlines, flat shading, halftone dots, sticker symbols, flowers, bows, spirals, stars, geometric pop icons, abstract blobs, manga-style panels, candy-glitch accents, surreal layered collage. Cute chaos, not horror, not grotesque. Character usage: Rapidly alternate featured characters from Image 1–5. Some cuts may show one character in a fisheye close-up. Some cuts may show multiple characters in different panels. Some cuts may duplicate the same character several times in different positions. The sequence should feel like a rotating cast in a chaotic visual relay. Expression direction: Use strong expression variety: shock, joy, mischief, hyped excitement, wide-eyed overload, wink, cheeky grin, spinning dizzy face, playful smugness, surprised cute reaction. Expressions should feel punchy and stylized, but not tied to lip-sync. Editing: Very fast cuts, every 0.1 to 0.5 seconds. Use smash cuts, panel swaps, strobe-like graphic switches, sudden lens changes, snap zooms, repeated frame echoes, multi-panel face bursts, and visual rhythm that constantly mutates. Avoid long stable shots. Keep the sequence dense and surprising. Timeline: 0.0–2.0s Immediate visual explosion. A randomly selected character appears in an extreme fisheye or ultra-wide close-up. Pastel symbols, stickers, spirals, and graphic shapes burst into frame. Quick cut to another character with a different lens distortion. 2.0–4.0s Increase variety. Rapid rotation among Image 1–5. Use dutch angles, tunnel zoom, clone echoes, panel fragmentation, and pop-art overlays. Characters do brief dance-like or reaction-based motion bursts. Each cut should introduce a different type of visual chaos. 4.0–6.0s Split-panel chaos. The screen breaks into manga-style panels. Different characters appear in different panels at the same time. Some panels show face close-ups, some show small dance bursts, some show sticker explosions. Panels slide, rotate, and snap into new positions. 6.0–8.0s Mob-dance energy. Characters appear as repeated clones or quick alternating performers. Use synchronized bouncing, side-step gestures, tiny hops, hand poses, and playful crowd-like movement. The camera swings with a fisheye lens, making the dance feel warped and energetic. 8.0–10.0s Kaleidoscope section. Faces, stickers, bows, flowers, and abstract shapes mirror into a rotating kaleidoscope. Characters appear in mirrored fragments but remain cute and recognizable. The frame feels dense, colorful, and hypnotic. 10.0–12.0s Crash zoom reaction montage. Fast zoom-ins on eyes, faces, hands, and cute poses. Switch expressions rapidly: wide-eyed surprise, mischievous grin, wink, smug face, dizzy spiral-eye mood, and overexcited joy. Use sharp pop-art impact frames and halftone bursts. 12.0–13.5s Lens tunnel and graphic overload. The camera rushes through a tunnel of stickers, flowers, spirals, and pastel panels. Multiple characters pop in one after another using different lens effects: fisheye, wide-angle stretch, diagonal crop, rotating close-up, clone echo. The screen becomes a layered kawaii collage. 13.5–15.0s Final impact climax. Fastest switching, strongest lens effects, biggest sticker explosions, and the densest visual collage. Show several characters in rapid succession or in simultaneous panels. End on a strong high-impact final frame: distorted cute close-up, wild pose, or layered group-chaos composition. Important constraints: No lip-sync focus. No slow shots. No realistic concert staging. Do not let only one character dominate. Use many different visual tricks across the clip rather than repeating one effect. Keep the chaos playful, cute, and stylish rather than dark or grotesque. Negative prompt: realistic style, horror, gore, grotesque deformation, broken anatomy, extra limbs, muddy colors, low energy, empty background, plain static camera, weak motion, repetitive single-shot composition, one-character-only repetition, realistic performance stage