You can use the drawtext filter to apply the countdown on top of the video. The filter syntax would be
-vf "drawtext=fontfile='C\:\\Windows\\fonts\\Arial.ttf':
fontcolor=yellow:fontsize=45:x=100:y=65:
text='%{eif\:trunc((5447324-t)/86400)\:d\:2} days
%{eif\:trunc(mod(((5447324-t)/3600),24))\:d\:2} hrs
%{eif\:trunc(mod(((5447324-t)/60),60))\:d\:2} m
%{eif\:trunc(mod(5447324-t\,60))\:d\:2} s'"
The number 5447324
is the countdown duration expressed in seconds. That's the only variable related to the countdown you need to change.
If the input is an image or image sequence, you would just add the loop option before it i.e. -loop 1 -i image.png
or -loop 1 -i img%03d.png
. If you have a video, there is a stream_loop option. but it's buggy. Then, you would ingest the movie via the movie filter rather than as a direct input. Unless your video is long, I'd recommend converting it to an image sequence.