Sora
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New vertical video runUltra-realistic 4-second vertical video (720x1280) shot like a handheld smartphone clip, single continuous take, no cuts. POV of a person sitting on the living room floor on a cozy winter morning, natural daylight coming from a nearby window, no filters, true-to-life colors. In the center of the frame on a soft rug is a medium-sized, short-haired tabby cat with vivid green eyes, already pawing eagerly at a small, neatly wrapped present with shiny paper and a simple bow. The phone camera is held in one hand at low, cat-eye level, with subtle handheld shake and tiny focus breathing as the autofocus hunts slightly when the cat moves. At the start, the cat is already scratching and tugging at the wrapping; the camera instinctively leans in closer, slightly zooming with a little wobble. You hear crisp, realistic sounds of claws on paper, rustling and tearing, the faint jingle of a collar tag, and a soft household ambience: distant hum of an appliance, a faint TV murmur from another room, maybe a heater vent blowing, but no clear speech. Within a second or two the cat aggressively rips open the wrapping, shredding it with both paws; bits of paper fly, the bow pops off with a tiny snap sound, and the camera readjusts to keep the action centered, tilting and correcting with a natural phone user movement. As the top of the box is exposed, inside is a small, clearly visible cat “bath time” kit: a bottle of cat shampoo and a bright-colored harness, lit plainly and unflatteringly. The cat freezes, staring down at the contents, ears slowly flattening, pupils widening in a comically offended, betrayed expression. You hear a tiny questioning “mrrrp?” from the cat, then in the final beat the cat suddenly freaks out—tail puffing up, back arching as it springs backward out of the torn wrapping, accidentally kicking the empty box and bits of paper toward the camera. The phone jostles with a quick, startled shake as the filmer instinctively reacts, briefly dipping down to the rug before correcting, keeping the cat’s dramatic retreat and fluffed tail just in frame. Off-camera, a person lets out a suppressed, breathy laugh and a sharp inhale, but no words, only amused wheeze-laughs and a muffled gasp. The paper continues to crinkle under the cat’s paws, the box rocks and taps lightly on the floor, and the clip ends on the cat staring back wide-eyed from a short distance, clearly offended by the “terrible” present, in a lighthearted, viral-phone-video style with natural lighting, ultra-realistic textures, and no dialogue or on-screen text.Dimensions: 720×1280Raccourcis: Espace/Entrée pour lecture; Flèche droite pour média suivant; Flèche gauche pour revenir.

New vertical video run

Postle AI

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TV
Ultra-realistic 4-second vertical video (720x1280) shot like a handheld smartphone clip, single continuous take, no cuts. POV of a person sitting on the living room floor on a cozy winter morning, natural daylight coming from a nearby window, no filters, true-to-life colors. In the center of the frame on a soft rug is a medium-sized, short-haired tabby cat with vivid green eyes, already pawing eagerly at a small, neatly wrapped present with shiny paper and a simple bow. The phone camera is held in one hand at low, cat-eye level, with subtle handheld shake and tiny focus breathing as the autofocus hunts slightly when the cat moves. At the start, the cat is already scratching and tugging at the wrapping; the camera instinctively leans in closer, slightly zooming with a little wobble. You hear crisp, realistic sounds of claws on paper, rustling and tearing, the faint jingle of a collar tag, and a soft household ambience: distant hum of an appliance, a faint TV murmur from another room, maybe a heater vent blowing, but no clear speech. Within a second or two the cat aggressively rips open the wrapping, shredding it with both paws; bits of paper fly, the bow pops off with a tiny snap sound, and the camera readjusts to keep the action centered, tilting and correcting with a natural phone user movement. As the top of the box is exposed, inside is a small, clearly visible cat “bath time” kit: a bottle of cat shampoo and a bright-colored harness, lit plainly and unflatteringly. The cat freezes, staring down at the contents, ears slowly flattening, pupils widening in a comically offended, betrayed expression. You hear a tiny questioning “mrrrp?” from the cat, then in the final beat the cat suddenly freaks out—tail puffing up, back arching as it springs backward out of the torn wrapping, accidentally kicking the empty box and bits of paper toward the camera. The phone jostles with a quick, startled shake as the filmer instinctively reacts, briefly dipping down to the rug before correcting, keeping the cat’s dramatic retreat and fluffed tail just in frame. Off-camera, a person lets out a suppressed, breathy laugh and a sharp inhale, but no words, only amused wheeze-laughs and a muffled gasp. The paper continues to crinkle under the cat’s paws, the box rocks and taps lightly on the floor, and the clip ends on the cat staring back wide-eyed from a short distance, clearly offended by the “terrible” present, in a lighthearted, viral-phone-video style with natural lighting, ultra-realistic textures, and no dialogue or on-screen text.