Create a hyper‑realistic cinematic portrait of the person from the uploaded photo, completely transformed into a figure made of Coca‑Cola instead of liquid metal. The face must match the reference image 1:1: identical bone structure, face shape, cheekbones, jawline, nose, lips, eyes, eyebrows, ears, skin proportions, and apparent age, and the hairstyle must be exactly the same in cut, length, volume, direction, and overall style, now rendered as flowing dark cola liquid.
The skin appears as a translucent, glossy Coca‑Cola surface: deep caramel‑brown with rich reddish highlights, full of tiny fizzy bubbles moving under and across the surface. Show thin streams, droplets, and splash shapes of cola along the forehead, cheeks, and neck, as if the figure is made entirely from carbonated soda. The hair turns into thick, wavy streams of cola with bubbles trapped inside, but it still follows the exact hairstyle silhouette from the reference.
All around the subject, add floating cola droplets and bubbles in the air, catching light and enhancing the sense of carbonation. Place a realistic, branded Coca‑Cola glass bottle or classic contour bottle prominently in the scene, near the lower part of the frame or slightly in front of the character, with visible condensation, label, and fizzy cola inside, matching the same liquid material as the body. The background remains a dark, softly blurred environment (e.g., a moody bar, studio, or abstract dark setting) with soft bokeh lights so the cola figure and bottle stand out.
Lighting and mood: use high‑end studio lighting with a strong key light and subtle rim lights to create intense reflections and depth in the cola surface, emphasizing transparency, liquid thickness, and bubbles. Apply ray‑traced reflections and refractions on the cola body and bottle, with intricate micro‑textures, giving a surreal yet photorealistic look. Overall atmosphere should feel cinematic, dramatic, and slightly fantastical, rendered in 8K resolution with rich warm cola tones contrasted against darker background shadows.
Hard identity constraints for the model:
Preserve the face 100 percent identical to the uploaded photo: same geometry, proportions, and expression, only changing the material to cola while keeping recognizability.
Maintain the exact same hairstyle and gender presentation, just represented as flowing Coca‑Cola liquid.
All carbonation, bubbles, splashes, and the Coca‑Cola bottle are stylistic elements; they must not distort, obscure, or change the person’s core facial identity.