Create a 2-page Xiaohongshu-style character analysis carousel in English about Rue Bennett’s character development in Euphoria.
Important instructions:
- Generate 2 separate vertical images, NOT one combined collage.
- Use the character appearance from the reference images in p2-3 as the visual base for Rue.
- Follow the layout, composition style, and editorial template of the first reference image.
- The result should be a combination of strong character visuals + readable English text.
- Keep the overall look cinematic, emotional, moody, and polished.
Visual style:
Dark, cinematic Euphoria-inspired aesthetic with soft neon blue, purple, and warm golden highlights. Use a magazine-style editorial layout with a large portrait, layered text blocks, handwritten notes, subtle grain, torn paper texture, and clean typography. The mood should feel intimate, melancholic, and psychologically sharp.
Character:
Rue Bennett — teenage girl with short curly dark hair, tired eyes, oversized hoodie or simple casual clothing, emotionally fragile but intelligent, withdrawn, observant, and vulnerable. Use the Rue appearance from p2-3 reference images. Do not make her look glamorous or robotic. Keep her human, raw, and expressive.
Text requirements:
- English only
- Text must be readable and meaningful
- Do not leave the pages empty
- Do not generate random gibberish text
- This is a character analysis, not a fan poster
Page 1:
Title:
“RUE BENNETT”
Subtitle:
“A CHARACTER ARC OF NUMBNESS, GRIEF, AND SELF-AWARENESS”
Main analysis text:
“Rue begins as someone overwhelmed by pain, addiction, and emotional detachment. At first, she uses numbness as protection. Drugs, sarcasm, and distance become the way she survives. She is observant and deeply sensitive, but she does not know how to carry grief without destroying herself.”
Section title:
“WHO SHE WAS AT THE START”
Bullet points:
- emotionally shut down
- addicted to escape
- uses humor as defense
- afraid of intimacy
- trapped in grief after her father’s death
Short quote / handwritten note:
“She doesn’t want to feel less. She wants the pain to stop.”
Visual direction:
Large portrait of Rue based on p2-3 references, looking distant or thoughtful. Use a moody bedroom, dim light, blurred background, or soft neon atmosphere. Add handwritten annotations and subtle graphic elements, following the first image template.
Page 2:
Title:
“HOW RUE CHANGES”
Subtitle:
“FROM SELF-DESTRUCTION TO FRAGILE HONESTY”
Main analysis text:
“As the story moves forward, Rue does not become ‘fixed.’ Her change is quieter and more painful. She becomes more aware of the harm she causes, more honest about her dependence, and more conscious of the difference between love, need, and survival. Her development is not a clean redemption arc — it is a slow movement toward responsibility and self-recognition.”
Section title:
“WHAT CHANGED?”
Bullet points:
- more self-aware
- less romantic about escape
- begins to face consequences
- understands that love cannot save her alone
- starts moving from denial to accountability
Ending insight:
“Rue’s growth is not about becoming stable overnight. It is about learning to stay present in her own life.”
Short quote / handwritten note:
“Her real transformation is not healing. It is choosing not to disappear.”
Visual direction:
Use a different Rue pose and expression from page 1, still based on p2-3 references. She can appear calmer, more reflective, or slightly softer. Keep the same template style as the first image, but show a subtle emotional shift through posture, lighting, and facial expression.
Design notes:
- 2 separate pages only
- Follow the first reference image’s template closely
- Use p2-3 reference images for Rue’s appearance
- Editorial, cinematic, text-heavy, visually clean
- Clear hierarchy of title, subtitle, body text, and note-style quotes
- Each page should have a slightly different expression, pose, and composition
- Keep the tone deep, poetic, analytical, and emotionally grounded