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A highly detailed, cinematic vertical frame. A surreal urban drama in the spirit of magical realism.
At the center of the composition is a 2D animated scene from Gavriil Troepolsky's novella "White Bim Black Ear": a warm, happiness-infused illustration in the watercolor-and-pencil style of Soviet book graphics. On the wet asphalt at the very edge of a vast mirror-like puddle, in the chilly predawn fog of a deserted city street, a fleeting moment of joy is frozen — the owner, Ivan Ivanovich, a kind elderly man in a coat and hat, crouches down and smiles, extending his hand, while before him, glowing with delight, a tiny puppy Bim — a snow-white setter with a velvety black ear, a fluffy little bundle with a perky raised tail — jumps up. The puppy catches an ordinary autumn leaf from the owner's hands in midair, its whole figure an embodiment of trust and unalloyed happiness. Both characters are flat, drawn, as if they have stepped out of the pages of a beloved book, frozen in a silent frame of absolute love. Around them — gray concrete, a lone streetlamp, damp haze, blurred silhouettes of sleeping high-rises. The asphalt is hyperrealistic, wet, reflecting dull light, but…
The puddle becomes a portal into a world of memory and pain. Reflected in its perfectly smooth surface is not the gloomy sky, but the most poignant, heart-wrenching scene from the film "White Bim Black Ear" (dir. Stanislav Rostotsky, 1976). Inside the reflection — a photorealistic, three-dimensional frame, as if plucked straight from the film reel: late autumn, an empty Moscow courtyard, slush and bare trees. By the locked door of a stairwell, on the cold concrete doorstep, pressed against the doorframe, lies the real, three-dimensional Bim — exactly as in the film’s reference shots. Emaciated, with dulled coat and deep, grief-filled eyes. He does not howl, does not whimper — he simply waits, head resting on outstretched paws, and in his gaze is frozen a mute question to the departed master, whom no one will ever bring back. Beside the dog on the asphalt — a lone yellow leaf, dropped by the wind, and nothing else. No soap bubbles, no butterflies, no summer sun — only quiet tragedy and the cold autumn space inside the puddle, bursting forth from the plane of reflection with thick, almost palpable sorrow.
Artistic contrast: flat, naive, full of warmth and cloudless happiness, the 2D graphics — an embrace of the owner and puppy, a carefree game on the border of worlds — and the absolute, grainy photorealism of an autumn courtyard, of parting and genuine, adult pain. Soft morning light seeps through the city haze, meeting the painfully dim, grey-brown glow from the depths of the portal-reflection. Composition strictly 9:16, epic panoramic sweep, a feeling of a frozen miracle that turned into eternal grief. 4K, hyperrealistic render with elements of 2D collage, a frame worthy of the closing credits.
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