Mimic the style of Shaw Brothers films, set in a wild snowy mountain, with cold tones, high-contrast lighting, and heavy film grain. The orange cat protagonist (wearing coarse cloth woodcutter clothes, carrying a machete on its shoulder) walks through the snow, with the wind and snow howling. It squats down and gently places a gray mouse next to a dying white cat on the snow, lowering its head and saying in a deep English voice:
“This gray mouse is for you… I hope you can survive this winter.”
The white cat is barely breathing, and snowflakes fall on its slightly trembling whiskers.
The scene shifts abruptly to warm tones—a farmhouse courtyard, with firewood crackling. The orange cat is chopping wood, looking relaxed. The courtyard gate is pushed open, and a black cat (wearing a red diamond-studded dress, walking elegantly with a strong presence) slowly walks in. The orange cat is stunned, showing a look of surprise, and says in English:
“Are you… that white cat?”
The black cat stops, slightly tilts its head, and the atmosphere instantly freezes. The next second, she suddenly pulls out an exaggerated Gatling gun from behind her back, the barrel reflecting cold light, glaring at the orange cat, and says coldly in English:
“I am that gray mouse.”
Immediately following—exaggerated Wuxia-style slow motion + explosive sound effects, the Gatling gun wildly sweeps, fire and bullet casings pour down like rain, the orange cat dodges in panic, and the entire courtyard is hit, with wood chips flying and dust rising everywhere, the frame freezes in extreme chaos and absurdity.