Frozen Fury: Yutyrannus Hunt
#3122[Style] National Geographic wildlife documentary, IMAX film quality, 4K ultra HD, photorealistic, high-frame-rate slow motion. [Duration] 10 seconds [Scene] A 4,500-meter-high snowy mountain cliff, with a gray-white scree slope lightly covered in snow. The background is a chain of blue-gray mountain ridges, the sky is overcast, and fine snow grains are flying through the wind. [00:00-00:04] Shot 1: Stealth, telephoto close-up, 600mm. A Yutyrannus huali crouches behind a rock, showing only half of its feathered head and its front claws. Wind lifts the fluffy gray-white primitive feathers on the sides of its face, and each feather tip carries tiny ice crystals. Its amber iris tightens as the pupil contracts suddenly, locking onto prey. The front limbs draw in silently, and the detailed texture of the clawed hands is clearly visible, with fine keratin scales and sparse downy feathers. [00:04-00:07] Shot 2: Explosion, side tracking, high-speed slow motion at 240fps. The Yutyrannus launches from behind the rock into a fully extended running stride, its spine and long tail stretched into a taut bow. The moment its hind legs push off the stone and snow spray outward in a fan. In slow motion, the stiff tail feathers arc through the air like a balancing rope, while the fluffy feathers along the body whip and roll in the wind. [00:07-00:10] Shot 3: Strike, extreme close-up, macro lens. Extreme close-up: the moment its clawed front foot slams onto the ground, the three fingers spread wide and the curved black claws drive into the thin snow layer, throwing up tiny ice particles that fly across the lens in shallow depth of field. Freeze on the frame where the claw tip is embedded in the snow, with a cold glint reflected along the curve of the talon.