Use two uploaded photos of two different people as references to create a cinematic black-and-white double portrait. The image must show two clearly separate people in one shared composition, not a face merge. Place the younger person in the foreground in a soft side profile with eyes closed, positioned close to the camera. Place the older person in the background in a front-facing or near front-facing pose, with part of the face naturally covered by the younger person’s profile so that only the uncovered half of the background face remains clearly visible. Important composition requirements: the two heads/faces should be approximately the same size, and their jawline and chin contours should align naturally, so the lower face shapes visually connect in a smooth and intentional way. The overlapping should feel elegant, realistic, and carefully composed, like a directed studio portrait. The younger person’s closed eyes should create a calm, intimate, emotional feeling. The older person’s visible half-face should remain clear, gentle, and expressive. Emphasize a strong mother-and-daughter resemblance, especially in the facial structure, nose bridge, lips, cheek contour, and jaw shape. Use a dark black background, minimalist studio setup, and high-contrast monochrome lighting. The mood should be intimate, elegant, quiet, emotional, and refined. Hair should look natural and dark, with simple unobtrusive clothing. The final image should feel like a professional editorial fine art portrait with realistic skin texture, soft shadow transitions, clean framing, no extra objects, no text, no watermark, no interface elements. Not a face fusion, not double exposure, not collage. Two distinct people, naturally overlapped, with matching facial scale, aligned chin line, and the younger person’s eyes closed.