Meet the kid with a fake plastic dad in a Saccharine sweet town. Luckily, music and dance makes things come alive, even if for only a few minutes.
Check out this fantastic video for Belgian star Stromae — he plays the dad here — directed by Raf Reyntjens, who nails the a vibe that's just on the brighter side of Tim Burton.
A one shot music video that tracks a 'chinese whisper' as it is passed along line. However in this game, it is not the whisper that distorts and grows stranger as it travels ear-to-ear, but rather the whisperers themselves.
A family portrait comes to life and a household comes crashing apart in ambitious vfx. Directed by Chris Lavelle and his brother Steve, who handled every element of the video. [SG]
Skylar Grey clearly knows that there's something not to be trusted about her boyfriend and their camping trip, while the camera and its attached light strains to illuminate that truth.
The music video submission deadline for the annual Camerimage — the biggest international film festival devoted to the creation of film image by cinematographers — is August 19.
For submission and other informaton about the event — being held November 16 – 23 in Bydgoszcz, Poland — please visit www.camerimage.pl.
When a young woman finally parts with her beloved stuffed panda, we follow the heartbroken bear as he wanders the streets of Los Angeles on an epic journey of self discovery. This all-narrative promo for electronic artist Michel Cleis was shot by Adam Neustadter and the Good Company team over two days in LA. The dance track is based around a familiar hook from Jamie Woon’s “Lady Luck” but is true to Cleis’s signature production style.
Adam Neustadter, director: “What really drew me to this concept was the challenge of making the viewer emotionally connect with this ridiculous panda, I felt if I could make you feel for him, and even relate to him on some level, then it could be pretty special. We tried to play everything as straight as possible, treating it like an honest relationship story, only the dude happens to be a big panda.”
There's a Jay-Z video vibe at play here — think the b/w "99 Problems" with a hint of "On To The Next One" symbolism — for this underground NYC hip-hop clip. [SG]