
Helicopter Rooftop Extraction
At sunset, the sky burns orange behind a dense city skyline as a military helicopter hovers low over a skyscraper rooftop. The rotors slice the air violently, kicking up smoke, dust, and loose debris into spiraling clouds. The aircraft hangs heavy and loud, its shadow swallowing the roof beneath it. Ropes drop. Three soldiers slide down simultaneously, their bodies swinging in the rotor wash, silhouetted against the glowing sun. From below, they look small and exposed, dangling hundreds of feet above the streets. The city stretches endlessly behind them, lights beginning to flicker on through the haze. The helicopter pulls forward slightly, forcing the ropes to angle and sway. Wind tears at their gear. Sparks and smoke drift across frame, creating chaos in the air. Cut to the rooftop. One operator braces his boots against the concrete edge while descending fast. Others already on the roof cover the perimeter with rifles raised. Thick smoke rolls across the surface, and distant fires burn between buildings, turning the skyline into a war zone. The mood is tense and urgent — loud engines, violent wind, no margin for mistakes. Every movement feels risky. One slip means a fatal fall. This isn’t a smooth rescue. It’s a hostile extraction under pressure, happening seconds before everything collapses into chaos.