Seedance 2.0Mei Lin Elemental Kung Fu Performance
Create a 15-second cinematic kung fu performance video. Use @[image1] as the fixed character sheet reference. The character must strictly match the character sheet. Use @[image2] as the storyboard reference. Follow the storyboard shot by shot as the main source for action order, camera rhythm, body movement, framing, movement direction, camera angles and visual progression. Treat each storyboard panel as a sequential keyframe. Preserve the shot order and make the video feel like the storyboard has been translated into continuous live-action motion. The sequence must end on a frozen final frame while the performer is still airborne. Do not add text, captions, storyboard labels, arrows, UI, logos or watermarks. Do not treat the storyboard as a single image. Do not redesign the character, change the costume or alter the face. Do not begin with a calm stance, preparation pose or slow introduction. Do not make the elemental effects look like superhero powers or excessive fantasy glow. Visual style: stylized cinematic realism, high-end 3D painterly animation quality, dynamic cloth simulation, expressive silhouette design, rich cinematic lighting, controlled color palette, natural motion blur, dramatic scale, beautiful but aggressive physicality, premium feature-animation aesthetic. Environment: vast ancient temple, towering stone columns, worn temple floor, drifting incense smoke, hanging fabric, harsh light shafts, faint dust in the air, subtle wet floor reflections, high contrast shadows. The performance is a solitary female kung fu routine inside a vast ancient temple. The routine starts immediately in action, with no calm stance, no preparation pose and no slow introduction. The movement should feel aggressive, ritualistic, disciplined, physically extreme and spiritually charged. This is not a fight against an enemy. It is a solo performance of force, control, exhaustion, fury and release. Follow story board for choreography direction. Element progression: early sequence: subtle wind, dust and pressure lines responding to movement. middle sequence: stronger air shockwaves, stone fragments, floor cracks and water-like ripples across the temple floor. late sequence: controlled fire trails, heat distortion and energy spirals around explosive strikes and kicks. climax: wind, dust, stone, water ripple and fire accents combine into a stronger elemental vortex. final beat: the performer is airborne above the temple floor in a powerful kung fu strike, body twisted mid-air, hair and fabric flaring outward, with all elements converging around her before impact. Elemental VFX must feel spiritual, ritualistic and cinematic. The effects should be integrated with the choreography and motivated by physical movement. Keep the energy raw, elemental, atmospheric and grounded in the temple environment. Use Laban movement logic throughout: weight: strong, heavy, grounded during impacts, with brief lightness during jumps and aerial twists time: quick during strikes, kicks, drops and turns, sustained during suspended holds and recovery transitions space: direct during attacks, blocks and lunges, indirect during spinning turns and elemental vortex moments flow: bound during rooted stances and precise strikes, free during aerial motion, spinning fabric movement and elemental release







