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Alterverse Studio

@Alterverse_AI3,294 subscribers

AI Filmmaking Studio ✦ Multi-Award-Winning ✦ Creator of Deeper & Darker ™ + Eldertales ™ ✦ CPP Kling AI, Runway, Pika, Freepik, Hailuo AI, Dreamina, Capcut

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I felt the need to rework Man-At-Arms from the new He-Man movie to better reflect an accurate representation of the character as he appears in the original cartoons but also my own personal spin.

I felt the need to rework Man-At-Arms from the new He-Man movie to better reflect an accurate representation of the character as he appears in the original cartoons but also my own personal spin.

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Ready to reveal an IP developed over the past seven months. Introducing The Ninth Step: Chapter I In 1959, nine Soviet ski hikers died in the northern part of the Ural Mountains ridge under strange circumstances. Only one came back. This is their story. Read more below: Inspiration The film takes inspiration from the real event of the Dyatlov Pass. The incident is so bizarre that, even today, the circumstances surrounding the nine hikers’ deaths remain almost impossible to comprehend, from inexplicably severed limbs to traces of radiation discovered on several of the bodies. To honor the era and the mystery, the film is crafted in a distinctly Russian inspired setting, with period-accurate clothing, décor, and a muted, haunting color palette reminiscent of 1970s - 1980s Soviet cinema. The visual language draws deeply from the unsettling style of Andrei Tarkovsky, amplifying the story’s unnerving implications and grounding it in a world that feels almost real even though its AI generated. What it does The film aims to place you, the viewer, in an unsettling position, not through exaggerated horror or wild fiction (except the beginning and end), but through its commitment to reality. It draws from documented locations, real individuals, and the actual chronology of events, layering subtle mysteries on top of an already disturbing truth. Throughout the story, carefully placed objects and clues invite both confusion and curiosity, prompting the audience to ask “How could that happen?” and just as hauntingly, “Wait… that actually makes perfect sense. How we built it The primary goal of this project was to persuade the audience that they are watching a real film shot during that era, a lost relic documenting what truly happened during the Dyatlov Pass incident. Every aspect of the visual language was custom built to mirror the authentic look of Soviet era filmmaking, designed to evoke a deep sense of nostalgia and credibility. Narratively, it uses a “full-circle ending” structure: the film opens with a brief, ambiguous glimpse of a location that carries no immediate meaning. Only at the very end does that moment snap into place, recontextualizing the opening and closing the story arc, at least for now. Some shots were engineered for narrative logic, others to evoke an emotional unraveling, and every transition, whether a match cut, J-cut, or subtle visual bridge, was used deliberately. Nothing is accidental. Each choice was made to strengthen the illusion of authenticity and to ensure the film feels like a genuine artifact from the past. What's next for The Ninth Step This piece serves as an introduction to the true story behind The Ninth Step, a glimpse of what the project ultimately aims to explore and achieve. The long-term vision is to expand this into a fully funded narrative series capable of captivating not only those familiar with the real incident, but also viewers who have never encountered it before. The plan is to continue releasing additional episodic chapters, each one peeling back more layers of the mystery and pushing the story toward its full, expansive form.

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