Create a 10 second ultra-realistic high-speed chase shot with the camera physically gripping the animal’s tail, as if mounted or tightly held, maintaining a locked trailing perspective. The tail fills the foreground, muscles flexing and skin rippling under strain, fur vibrating from speed and airflow.The animal accelerates into a full sprint across the grassy field. Motion is extremely fast but physically accurate: powerful hind-leg extensions, visible spine compression and release, tail counterbalancing each stride. Grass bends, flattens, and snaps back under impact; dirt and small debris kick up naturally. The horizon shakes subtly from ground force, not artificial camera shake.Camera behavior: intense forward velocity with strong motion parallax in the background, but the tail remains relatively stable in frame due to the grip. Micro-oscillations sync perfectly with each stride cycle. Wind noise roars; fur flutters backward consistently with speed. Lighting stays natural and continuous, shadows strobing rhythmically beneath the body as legs cycle.No slow motion, no cuts, no stylization. Pure kinetic realism — raw speed, real biomechanics, real inertia — ending mid-sprint with maximum momentum still building.