
A close-up, ultra-realistic shot of a man attached in the uploaded reference image ( Keep the face of the person 100% accurate from the reference image ) leaning forward on the dog sled handle. His face fills most of the frame — windburned skin, frost in his beard, fear in his eyes. His goggles sit slightly tilted from the rough ride. Snowflakes hit his cheeks and melt. In front of him, three lead husky is partly in the frame, sharp and detailed, its head turned slightly toward the camera. You can see the dog’s breath as white mist, their fur coated with snow, and the sled ropes pulling tight beside its shoulder. The front side of the sled and wooden runner is visible close to the lens, giving a natural sense of depth. The camera position feels almost like a GoPro fixed on the sled’s front corner — wide, close, immersive. No vignetting. No black borders. Clean full-frame shot. Behind the man, at the edge of the frame, a massive polar bear is mid-jump — its paws extended, snow exploding around it, jaws open in a full attack. The bear’s motion blur feels real, but the man and the dog in front stay sharp. The snowstorm rages around them with natural wind streaks and flying powder. The background shows faint ice cliffs through the mist. Every element looks real — sled size, dog behavior, lighting, textures, snow, hair movement. The mood is pure panic and survival, captured at the exact moment he realizes the bear is right behind him.
No input images needed