The worker stepped into the elevator and pressed the ‘up’ button, humming to himself as he did so. The doors closed and the elevator began to rise upwards, ascending through the shaft towards the top floor where his manager was. ‘CLANG!’ Suddenly, the elevator halted, shaking. The worker steadied himself on the wall, looking around in confusion. He was no longer moving. He pressed the up and down buttons each repeatedly to no avail. He slammed the fire button, but nothing happened. The lights in the elevator flicked off. Then he could hear something: shouts and screams, rumbling and gushing. The elevator started to shake, only a little at first but growing. It started to tilt. He could hear more shouts now, mixed with crashes, thuds, and tearing, as well as an endless gushing. Then he felt it. Rising up his feet, then up his legs towards his torso, rising incredibly rapidly: water. Cold, muddy water. He yelled for help. He slammed at the controls. He shook the elevator wildly. But to no avail. The water kept rising. He raised his head for a last gulp of air as the elevator started to shift and the water rose ever upwards… (This was just a short story I decided to make to dramatize the story of the mini figure in the elevator. I think floods are terrible, but I like these videos!).
I cannot imagine having to clean all this up, dusting all the sand, separating everything, and then again having to edit the video, keep up this work! U are an amazing person!
Every time I watch these videos, I think about how much more satisfying I would find them if they were a constant video shot from one angle, rather than jumping to different camera views and showing the same thing multiple times from different angles.