Create a 15-second cinematic animated noir scene with no dialogue. Use the attached character sheet
Create a 15-second cinematic animated noir scene with no dialogue. Use the attached character sheets as the primary reference for character consistency. Use [trace] and [trace-expressions]- expression guide as the detective dog reference, and [batdog2] as the Doberman anti-hero reference. Preserve their exact character designs, proportions, clothing, silhouettes, markings, accessories, facial structure, and personality cues. Use [img1] and [img2] as visual references for the gritty graphic-novel noir style, rooftop atmosphere, alley lighting, wet pavement, steam, silhouettes, and dramatic city mood. Style: dark hand-inked graphic novel, gritty painterly animation, high contrast noir lighting, rain-slick pavement, smoky atmosphere, warm orange alley glow mixed with green-yellow rooftop city light. The scene should feel tense, cinematic, quiet, and emotionally readable, not hectic. Duration: 15 seconds. Follow these 10 beats in order with calm cinematic pacing. Timing is approximate, not rigid. Prioritize smooth transitions, clear body language, and silent tension over fast action. 1. Wide establishing shot: the Doberman anti-hero crouches silently on a rooftop ledge, watching the glowing city skyline. His cape shifts slowly in the wind. 2. Slow push-in from behind the Doberman as he lowers his gaze from the city down into the alley below. 3. Cut to the detective dog standing alone in the narrow alley, framed by warm orange light from a smoky doorway. Steam drifts around him and puddles reflect the neon glow. 4. The detective hears movement above. He freezes, visibly nervous, ears and eyes reacting first, but he does not run. 5. The Doberman steps off the rooftop and swoops downward in a controlled, shadowy descent. Keep him mostly as a powerful silhouette against the city glow, cape spread wide. 6. Low-angle shot from behind the detective as the Doberman lands ahead of him. The landing is strong but restrained. Steam rolls outward, puddles ripple, reflections distort. 7. The detective flinches slightly, then steadies himself. He bravely takes one deliberate step forward instead of backing away. 8. Close-up on the Doberman: suspicious stare, narrowed eyes, guarded posture. He studies the detective carefully, unsure whether to trust him. 9. Close-up on the detective: nervous but determined. He lowers his guarded paws slightly, showing he does not want a fight. 10. Final steady two-shot: the tension softens. The Doberman relaxes just enough to show acceptance. The detective and Doberman exchange a slow, subtle nod, silently establishing that they are not enemies. Camera direction: slow cinematic push-ins, controlled cuts, dramatic low angles, one smooth swooping descent, subtle handheld tension only during the landing, final calm locked-off two-shot. Motion details: cape moving in wind, steam drifting slowly, light rain falling, puddles rippling, detective taking one brave step forward, Doberman landing with controlled force, both characters easing into a mutual nod. Restrictions: no dialogue, no subtitles, no captions, no text overlays, no comedy, no slapstick, no fighting, no handshake, no extra characters, no bright daylight. Keep the scene quiet, suspenseful, cinematic, and focused on the silent non-verbal agreement.
Reference Images