He stands in a lacquered red world, composed, immaculate, almost untouched by the chaos orbiting him. The drones hover like polished shadows — quiet, precise, loyal to his pulse.
There’s a calm to him, a kind of controlled glamour, as if the machines aren’t accessories but an extension of his intuition. Hollywood lights meet something colder, more deliberate. He doesn’t command attention; it gathers around him naturally, like static.
His face is half-blurred by their presence, as though the line between director, subject, and machinery has thinned to nothing. A man who moves through the world with technology tuned to his frequency — elegant, unsettling, effortlessly in charge.