

AI MOOD FILM
On a chaotic and hedonistic night in Great Yarmouth, teenage furries in thrifted animal suits stumble with teenage abandon through neon arcades and sketchy fairgrounds, drinking cider in car parks while dodging speeding boy racers and vandalizing bus stops. At the center, we follow the absurdly comic love story of an awkward young couple—Dog and Cat—whose budding romance peaks in a single, trembling hand-hold. In a surreal adolescent fantasy montage, we glimpse their whole imagined future together—from courting to marriage, kids, and old age—before snapping back to reality as they lean in for their first kiss. Suddenly, Cat is hit by a speeding car in a practically filmed car crash. The film whiplashes from comic, surreal chaos to brutal, gut-wrenching grief: ambulances, life support, calls to parents, Cat’s death, and Dog’s silent, solitary walk off the cliffs of Dover. The tone swerves from playful absurdity to visceral heartbreak, turning the goofy world on its head. Visually, it’s a fever dream—equal parts comedy and tragedy—where one wild night changes everything.
Health Centre | Idea one
STYLE REFERENCE VIDEOS
AI MOOD FILM
In a surreal, off-kilter doctor’s surgery, anxious patients arrive not for medicine, but to secretly have their broken puppets and musical instruments “repaired.” Reception is cold, forms are cryptic, and the air thrums with cult-like secrecy. As the nurse and doctor perform bizarre repairs behind closed doors, puppets and instruments begin to twitch with life—magical shimmers, glowing orbs, and increasingly chaotic musical outbursts. The façade cracks: patients freeze, the receptionist locks the door with a knowing smile, and the instruments and puppets become eerily autonomous. As patients are quietly led through a glowing, smoke-filled door, the sign outside flickers, revealing the surgery’s true name: “The Centre for Unbroken Things.”.
Health Centre | Idea TWO
REFERENCE ANIMATION VIDEO