Panavision DXL2 with a Cooke S7/i 50mm normal prime at f/4, deep focus, shot on ungraded LOG for flat naturalism, 16:9 documentary framing. A small wooden sign nailed to a crooked post in a grassy field. Hand-painted in shaky white letters, slightly smeared by rain: "WARNING: EXTREMELY DANGEROUS BUNNY." Below it, a single fluffy white rabbit sits on its haunches, facing the sign, completely still, one ear flopped. The rabbit is six inches tall. It is eating a daisy. No fence, no cage, no other warnings. Just the sign and the rabbit and a long empty meadow leading to a distant stone wall. Foreground: a single half-chewed carrot lying on its side, untouched by any creature. Sunlight is high and harsh, no clouds, no drama, just the indifferent brightness of a Tuesday afternoon. Color palette: grass green, faded white paint, weathered grey wood, pure white fur, daisy yellow. The rabbit faces the sign. The sign faces the camera. No motion—the daisy stem is broken but the flower still rests on the rabbit’s lip, frozen before the final bite. A butterfly sits on the sign’s top edge, unaware.