80s vintage pulp sci-fi magazine cover A vintage, cinematic poster for the TV series Rey Trueno, inspired by 70s and 80s movie and rock album covers. In the center, Rey Trueno—a veteran charismatic, rebellious mexican musician with dark sunglasses, long black hair, and a face that blends the intense charm of Lalo Salamanca from Better Call Saul with the face of Andrei Tarkovsky—stands with an enigmatic smirk. He wears a weathered leather jacket, exuding the aura of a rock outlaw and a philosophical wanderer. His world is split in two: one side, a neon-soaked cyber-dystopia with glitching CRT monitors, glowing data streams, and ominous corporate logos; the other, a sun-faded, analog past filled with reel-to-reel tapes, concert posters peeling off the walls, and an old muscle car roaring down a desert highway. Below him, Bruno Galindo, a determined journalist in a rumpled suit, clutches a tape recorder as shadowy FBI agents close in. To the side, Nayla and Benjamin hold the mystical Black Book, its golden symbols pulsating with cryptic energy. The typography is bold, hand-painted, reminiscent of old-school action thrillers. The color palette blends warm, grainy hues—burnt oranges, deep blues, and smoky purples—creating a retro-futuristic fusion of classic rock mythology and 80s sci-fi mysticism. The tagline reads: Siempre arriba, nunca baja!. The artwork has a hand-drawn, pulp-fiction aesthetic, like an underground vinyl album cover lost in time."
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