This project is all about that retro vibe, cool energy, and a whole lot of love.

I was in charge of creating the visuals for the song Safarmuhammad – Mastamu Devona — both the animation and the cover art.



Instead of focusing on the main events, I decided to jump straight to the ending — after all the wild adventures and close calls the characters have been through.

Wait, what?! Just the ending?!

Yep. I know it sounds a little weird — but hear me out.

I promise, it’s not just me being lazy. There’s a reason behind it.
The story unfolds through visual hints and subtle clues. The idea was to give the audience just enough to spark curiosity — enough to make them wonder and start piecing things together on their own.

The visual style is also inspired by modern, nostalgic takes on the ’80s.
You know the vibe — the ’80s as we remember them through rose-tinted glasses.
And honestly? That’s still super cool.

The first scene begins with a sense of relief. All the trouble is behind him.
The enemies are defeated.
After all that chaos, all he wants now… is to hear some music.
He’s heading home.

And yeah — those music player buttons make no sense, but whatever.
The protagonist is slowly revealing himself.
Oh no — there’s a cut under his eye.
Pretty sure that didn’t happen while shaving.
There goes our hero — driving away from something.
And judging by his knuckles, someone definitely tried to get in his way.
A broken phone and endless missed calls.
Yeah… something’s definitely not right.
He’s finally at peace — happy that she’s safe now.

Wait… she?
I wanted the audience to scratch their head and ask questions.

What exactly happened?
Why does the car have bullet holes?
Why is there a gun inside?
Why is a woman asleep in the back seat?

Nobody knows — and that’s the whole point!
I had to tell a story in a short amount of time. The idea was to give just a few pieces of the puzzle, so the audience could come up with their own cool backstory.
For example, I didn’t even show the car model — I wanted people to imagine it for themselves.

I think the coolest stories are the ones that take shape in our own heads — when we’re trying to fill in the gaps and solve the mysteries.

Or maybe just don’t overthink it — and simply feel the vibe!​​​​​​​

Thanks everyone!

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