Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme wingsuit cliff dive video. Use the
Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme wingsuit cliff dive video. Use the provided character sheet as the strict reference for the same adult female character: pale skin, striking blue eyes, long straight black hair, slim feminine athletic body, black V-neck swimsuit-style bodysuit, black harness straps, subtle orange details, sporty shoes, compact wingsuit pack, and side-wing fabric system. Important outfit detail: this is not a full traditional wingsuit. Her back and legs are not fully covered. The translucent white wing fabric is attached only from the sides with visible strap-like connectors from wrists to ankles, opening like side wings when she spreads her arms. Set the scene on a high rocky seaside cliff in bright daylight, with jagged coastal cliffs, narrow canyon gaps, ocean far below, and strong wind. The entire video must be one seamless uninterrupted shot with no cuts, no hidden cuts, no transitions, no montage, and no discontinuity in camera or body motion. Start with a very close shot of her face and upper body at the cliff edge. She does not run, hesitate, or pause. She instantly launches directly off the cliff in one aggressive motion. At the jump, the camera smoothly swings from the front around her body to behind her and locks into an extremely close rear chase shot. After the jump, she keeps her arms close to her body, the side-wing fabric stays collapsed, and she drops hard and fast in a short freefall. It must clearly feel like real downward falling, not floating. The close camera emphasizes gravity, speed, violent airflow, whipping hair, vibrating straps, and wind pressure on the suit. Then she throws her arms outward and backward, the side wing panels stretch open between wrists and ankles, and she instantly transitions into high-speed wingsuit flight. She flies through narrow rock corridors and jagged cliff gaps with aggressive sudden maneuvers. Several times she seems about to crash, then at the last second changes the angle of her arms, shoulders, and hips to snap into a new direction and avoid impact by a tiny margin. Her arm position must clearly control each sharp direction change. Rock textures rush past the lens, gaps feel dangerously tight, turbulence shakes her slightly, and tiny dust or grit lifts from nearby rock surfaces. In the final section, she flies extremely close to a large rock surface and passes just beneath a low rocky overhang with almost no clearance. Slow motion is very important in this final moment. While she continues flying forward at high speed, the camera performs a smooth orbit move around her, showing both her body and the rock surface in the same shot so the dangerous near-miss is clearly felt. The orbit should begin from behind her, curve around her side, and push toward the front, while keeping the rock very close in frame to emphasize how narrowly she passes it. The viewer must strongly feel the airflow and the extreme proximity between the woman and the rock. Her hair lashes in the wind, her cheeks react to air pressure, the side wing fabric stays taut with subtle ripples, and the rock surface passes dangerously close beside and above her. End on a tight slow-motion shot focused on her face and upper body as she continues flying, with the rock still close and the cliffs and ocean behind her. Realistic physics, powerful airflow, dangerous rock proximity, and a fully continuous one-take feeling throughout.