Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme snowboard video.
REFERENCE USAGE:
Image 1 = strict identity and outfit reference for the snowboarder. Preserve her exact face, blue eyes, long straight black hair, body proportions, white fitted zip-front snow top with high collar and open chest decollete, white slim body-hugging snow pants, and white snowboard boots.
Do NOT change her identity. Do NOT redesign the outfit. Do NOT make her look like a superhero or glossy fantasy model. She must feel like a real person performing insane but believable snowboard tricks.
SETTING:
A steep snowy mountain slope at golden sunrise, with fresh powder, icy hard-packed sections, wind-blown snow, pine trees, distant alpine peaks, ski-track marks, and cold mountain air. The scene must feel fast, dangerous, raw, cinematic, and physically believable.
VIDEO STYLE:
One continuous real-time 15-second shot, no cuts, no transitions, no slow motion. Hyper-realistic cinematic action, low 24–35mm lens, handheld chase-camera energy, natural motion blur, snow particles hitting the lens, realistic board-edge sounds, wind noise, breathing, snow spray, and visible body-weight corrections.
OPENING SHOT:
Start with an ultra-tight handheld close-up on her upper body and face while she is already speeding downhill. Her black hair moves in the cold wind, breath visible, snow particles flying past her face.
In one rapid move, the camera pulls back from her face to reveal her upper body, full snowboard stance, and black snowboard cutting through the snow.
CAMERA MOVEMENT:
After the pullback, the camera drops very low to ground level and locks behind her, close to the snowboard tail, chasing from just behind and slightly offset. It must stay close to the snow surface for most of the shot, never switching to a wide view or cutting away. It should feel like the camera is physically racing behind her.
ACTION FLOW:
She begins with fast controlled carving, slaloming between natural snow markers and pine shadows. Her knees compress, hips shift, and the snowboard edges bite into the icy slope. Snow sprays toward the lens with every turn.
She performs a sharp left-right slalom sequence, carving very close to the camera path. The camera stays glued behind her board, tracking every edge change and snow spray.
Midway down the slope, she spots a natural snow mound. Without stopping, she crouches low, builds speed, and launches off it. The camera follows from ground level as she jumps. She performs a realistic compact grab / stylish midair tweak, extreme but believable.
She lands hard into powder, knees absorbing the impact, snow exploding outward. The camera shakes from the landing force but stays locked behind her. She instantly recovers and continues downhill at full speed.
Next, she flows into a faster technical sequence: tight slalom turns through uneven snow bumps, one quick board press over a small ridge, then accelerates again.
FINAL MOMENT:
At the end, she throws the snowboard sideways into a strong controlled skid stop, spraying a wide wall of snow. She stops with the board angled across the slope, body turned slightly toward camera. As the snow settles, she lifts her gaze directly toward us and smiles naturally. The camera quickly closes in and the final shot becomes focused on her eyes and expression, holding on her warm smile and direct eye contact.
Create a hyper-cinematic 15-second continuous single-take extreme snowboard video.
REFERENCE USAGE:
Image 1 = strict identity and outfit reference for the snowboarder. Preserve her exact face, blue eyes, long straight black hair, body proportions, white fitted zip-front snow top with high collar and open chest decollete, white slim body-hugging snow pants, and white snowboard boots.
Do NOT change her identity. Do NOT redesign the outfit. Do NOT make her look like a superhero or glossy fantasy model. She must feel like a real person performing insane but believable snowboard tricks.
SETTING:
A steep snowy mountain slope at golden sunrise, with fresh powder, icy hard-packed sections, wind-blown snow, pine trees, distant alpine peaks, ski-track marks, and cold mountain air. The scene must feel fast, dangerous, raw, cinematic, and physically believable.
VIDEO STYLE:
One continuous real-time 15-second shot, no cuts, no transitions, no slow motion. Hyper-realistic cinematic action, low 24–35mm lens, handheld chase-camera energy, natural motion blur, snow particles hitting the lens, realistic board-edge sounds, wind noise, breathing, snow spray, and visible body-weight corrections.
OPENING SHOT:
Start with an ultra-tight handheld close-up on her upper body and face while she is already speeding downhill. Her black hair moves in the cold wind, breath visible, snow particles flying past her face.
In one rapid move, the camera pulls back from her face to reveal her upper body, full snowboard stance, and black snowboard cutting through the snow.
CAMERA MOVEMENT:
After the pullback, the camera drops very low to ground level and locks behind her, close to the snowboard tail, chasing from just behind and slightly offset. It must stay close to the snow surface for most of the shot, never switching to a wide view or cutting away. It should feel like the camera is physically racing behind her.
ACTION FLOW:
She begins with fast controlled carving, slaloming between natural snow markers and pine shadows. Her knees compress, hips shift, and the snowboard edges bite into the icy slope. Snow sprays toward the lens with every turn.
She performs a sharp left-right slalom sequence, carving very close to the camera path. The camera stays glued behind her board, tracking every edge change and snow spray.
Midway down the slope, she spots a natural snow mound. Without stopping, she crouches low, builds speed, and launches off it. The camera follows from ground level as she jumps. She performs a realistic compact grab / stylish midair tweak, extreme but believable.
She lands hard into powder, knees absorbing the impact, snow exploding outward. The camera shakes from the landing force but stays locked behind her. She instantly recovers and continues downhill at full speed.
Next, she flows into a faster technical sequence: tight slalom turns through uneven snow bumps, one quick board press over a small ridge, then accelerates again.
FINAL MOMENT:
At the end, she throws the snowboard sideways into a strong controlled skid stop, spraying a wide wall of snow. She stops with the board angled across the slope, body turned slightly toward camera. As the snow settles, she lifts her gaze directly toward us and smiles naturally. The camera quickly closes in and the final shot becomes focused on her eyes and expression, holding on her warm smile and direct eye contact.