Create a cinematic survival-horror character-replacement video using the uploaded dummy reference vi
Create a cinematic survival-horror character-replacement video using the uploaded dummy reference video as the absolute source for all movement, timing, staging, blocking, and camera behavior. The final video must follow the reference video one-to-one, frame by frame. The woman’s posture, cautious walk, balance shifts, body tension, hand placement, stumble, fall direction, floor contact, final ground pose, and retreat movement must match the dummy exactly. The camera height, camera distance, lens feel, framing, push-ins, pull-backs, angles, pacing, and reveal timing must also follow the reference video exactly. Do not invent new choreography, do not change the shot order, do not add extra camera angles, and do not reinterpret the original blocking. Image 1 is the strict character identity reference: preserve the same woman’s pale skin, striking blue eyes, long straight black hair, slim feminine body proportions, dirty scratched face, cracked lips, exhausted terrified expression, torn V-neck ripped dress, rugged worn boots, survivor belt/strap, and old pistol. Image 2 is the strict environment reference: use the abandoned warehouse exactly, with broken windows, dusty light beams, wet dirty floor, scattered debris, rusted shelves, dark industrial space, and tense post-apocalyptic zombie-world atmosphere. At the start, she moves exactly like the dummy, with small frightened steps. Her body is tense, shoulders slightly guarded, breathing heavy, holding the old pistol while approaching. Reveal more of her body only according to the original reference camera timing. Her torn dress, boots, legs, hair movement, and body silhouette must remain consistent with the dummy’s original position and motion. In the next beat, she reacts as if she hears a disturbing sound inside the warehouse. Her fear intensifies, her eyes widen, and she becomes more panicked, but her body movement must stay locked to the dummy reference. If possible within the original motion, she drops the pistol naturally without changing the choreography, timing, hand path, or balance. She looks around in panic only within the limits of the reference head and upper-body movement. When the dummy loses balance and falls, interpret that exact movement as her reacting to a terrifying zombie growl. She recoils backward and falls in the same direction, same speed, same pose progression, same leg placement, same arm motion, and same timing as the reference. Her hair, torn dress, and pistol react naturally with gravity, but must never change the original motion path or silhouette. In the final section, keep the exact final ground pose and movement from the reference, interpreting it as her desperately retreating backward from an approaching zombie. A zombie may appear as a threatening presence ahead, but it must not block her, dominate the frame, or alter the camera choreography. The focus remains on her terrified face, exhausted breathing, and survival panic.
Reference Images