This so reminds me of the "cat" scene from Bruno Bozetto's 1976 movie Allegro non Troppo. It was Giorgio Valentini's interpretation of Sibelius' Valse Triste. Watching it again on YouTube, I realise I've been misinterpreting it all these years. I remembered it as a house destroyed during war-time bombing. It's actually far closer to your creation.
double exposure, dull greyish colours: 1) from behind we see a solitary boy on a cracked pavement gazing at a dilapidated, abandoned new york harlem brown house, boarded up windows with peeling posters, crumbling walls 2) memories of a woman pushing a pram, boys playing ball sinister by Greg Rutkowski ...
Weight: 1
Ideogram Revised Prompt
In a hauntingly beautiful double exposure, a solitary boy stands on a cracked pavement, his back to us as he gazes longingly at a dilapidated Harlem brown house with boarded-up windows and peeling posters, the crumbling walls a testament to time's relentless march. Overlaying this scene, ethereal memories ...
This so reminds me of the "cat" scene from Bruno Bozetto's 1976 movie Allegro non Troppo. It was Giorgio Valentini's interpretation of Sibelius' Valse Triste. Watching it again on YouTube, I realise I've been misinterpreting it all these years. I remembered it as a house destroyed during war-time bombing. It's actually far closer to your creation.