Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme solo canoe rafting video. Image 1
Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme solo canoe rafting video. Image 1 is the strict identity and outfit reference. Preserve her exact face, pale skin, striking blue eyes, long straight black hair, slim feminine body, and the same deep V-neck swimsuit-style rafting outfit. Do not change identity, hair, body, or outfit. Set the scene on a fast-flowing whitewater river in bright daylight, with wet rocks, strong current, white foam, heavy splashes, and a wild outdoor rafting atmosphere. This is aggressive solo canoe rafting in a narrow rocky river with slalom movement, bouncing impacts, and constant spray. The video must be one uninterrupted 15-second single take: no cuts, hidden cuts, transitions, montage, time jumps, or broken camera movement. The camera moves seamlessly from start to end. At the start, the camera is very close in front of her, focused on her face and upper body while she is already moving fast in the canoe. Her wet black hair moves naturally, her blue eyes look focused, and spray hits the lens. The frame shows her expression, shoulders, arms, paddle control, and only part of the canoe. Then the camera smoothly pulls backward, opening the frame to reveal more of the canoe and rushing river. She charges forward and passes very close beside the camera with the canoe. This must feel like one flawless continuous move: close front view, pullback, side pass, then the camera naturally slips behind her. After she passes, the camera drops very low behind the canoe, almost at water level, staying close to the rear, wake, and splashing water. From here, it continues a tight rear follow with no cut or jump. She must not look like she is constantly sprint-paddling. She mainly uses the paddle to steer, stabilize, brace against the current, and control direction. In tight moments, she pushes off nearby rocks with the paddle to redirect the canoe and keep balance. The main action is a tight slalom through rough whitewater and rocks. She weaves left and right with short steering strokes, quick bracing touches, and rock-assisted corrections, not nonstop hard paddling. The canoe tilts and reacts to the river, never staying flat. Her upper body shifts naturally as she absorbs impacts. Small bounces, jolts, and strong splashes are visible. The final action is a downward waterfall drop. The river flows over a small waterfall, and she rides with the current straight over the edge. She clearly drops downward with the canoe from the top of the waterfall to the lower river below. Do not show a waterfall wall in front of her or a waterfall moving toward her. As the canoe leaves the edge and starts falling downward, the main slow-motion highlight begins. During slow motion, the camera starts behind her and smoothly orbits around her side to the front while she and the canoe are still falling. The orbit happens during the actual drop, in the same uninterrupted shot, ending close on her upper body and face. In slow motion, her hair lifts, water droplets freeze in the air, and the falling water and lower river are visible below. As the camera reaches the front, she looks naturally toward the camera and gives a confident cinematic smile, but does not point or gesture. She stays focused and controls the canoe with the paddle. As slow motion ends, real speed returns just before impact. The canoe slams into the water below, a huge splash explodes over the lens, and she continues forward at full speed. No text, no logos, no subtitles, no extra people, no raft team, no montage, no cuts.
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