शीघ्र विवरण
Scene 1 (0-4s): Evening urban street, soft dusk lighting, shallow depth of field. Girl walking alone, suddenly stops. Across the street stands an identical version of her, staring directly. Subtle glitch effect, cinematic camera push-in. Scene 2 (4-8s): Cross-cut visuals. Real version: neutral tones, slightly tired expression, slow movement. Parallel version: confident posture, smooth movement, warm golden lighting (or alternate darker cold tone for negative version). High contrast cinematic grading. Scene 3 (8-12s): The girl steps forward slowly. The parallel version mirrors her movements perfectly but not as a reflection. Slight delay/glitch in synchronization. Camera handheld slight motion, building tension. Scene 4 (12-16s): Both stand face to face. Close-up shot. Parallel version leans slightly forward. Cut to black. On-screen text at end: “That’s not another version of you… it’s who you’re becoming.”
How to work from this case
- Start with the original prompt and identify which subject, camera, and mood phrases drive the output.
- When iterating, change one variable first: lighting, motion, or emotion.
- If references are involved, adjust framing and movement separately for more stable generations.
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