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Protect the ocean

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The poster showcases surrealism with a giant human lung made of plastic bags, highlighting the theme of environmental protection

Surrealist movie poster, Yves Klein's new realism aesthetics, extreme monochromatism, high-cold artistic texture. Vertical format, minimal central symmetry composition. The core of the image is a huge "human lung" organ formed by multiple semi-transparent old plastic bags suspended, pressed, and folded, with the wrinkled texture delicately simulating alveoli and bronchial structures, semi-transparent layers of plastic creating subtle refraction and occlusion, absurd yet realistic. The background is a gradient from deep blue to pitch black void, with extremely blurred shallow depth of field; the foreground features a Klein blue mirrored sea, reflecting dark light. Soft diffuse light, no strong shadows, emphasizing the matte and transparency of plastic, 8K ultra-high-definition resolution, super-detailed macro showcasing the creases, seals of plastic bags, and the transparency of sea water, with colors saturated yet not garish. The main title is in a simple modern sans-serif font: "What you throw into the sea, the sea 'returns' to you." "The sea has no lungs, but humans do; the sea is not afraid of plastic, but humans are." "Don't let plastic grow you a 'fake lung'." The pure white text is of medium weight, located centrally at the bottom of the image, with ample whitespace. The subtitle is in a very thin sans-serif font: "Save the ocean, save ourselves." "Nature's 'evolution' is terrifyingly fast," with a thin, thread-like transparency of 80%, arranged in a single line directly below the main title.