A TV offer from The Strokes that's so good that it should come with a set of Ginzu knives, even if things take a turn toward the unexpected before the song ends.
Buckle up for an unholy alliance between Fury Road, Tron, a random midnight movie you'd rent on VHS from Blockbuster Video, and a high speed experience meets Oculus Rift.
Matt Bellamy, Muse: "Life on the road can bring out your inner beast, this song and video is about taming that beast, desiring a return to something human. Plus, Teen Wolf is cool."
Lance Drake, director: "Our aim with 'Something Human' was to continue the journey that began in 'Dig Down' and 'Thought Contagion.' Pulling further into a simulated world we follow Matt, Dom, and, Chris on the chase of a lifetime - where something as simple as returning some video tapes becomes an epic journey."
Janelle Monáe's "emotion picture" for new album Dirty Computer has launched, incorporating previously released music videos and lots more in a sci-fi magnum opus with lots of heart and bravery.
Breaking hearts, or breaking bones? This epic sci-fi battle manages to accomplish both tasks as two badass women face off with some seriously advanced weapons.
If Hollywood action blockbusters were allowed to be stylish and strange, then this surreal action homage/parody would be rocking the multiplex near you.
Dance is definitely the trend of 2015, ever since Sia’s “Chandelier” (and Kiesza’s “Hideaway”) broke some ground last year with their ur-dance videos. This time Muse and director Robert Hales take you inside a chalk-filled silo while two dancers express their kind of creepy selves.
Animation and whimsy abound in this clever homage to both one-take and NSFW videos. The easy explanation of "Black Sail" is "Polygonal people get down during a date night that ends in sweet sweet babymaking love," but it's a lot more wild and fun than that.
"Buried" is a nightmarish mystery about a missing person, a pregnancy, a bloody rampage and the cycle of life. It's creepy enough to either be your new favorite horror video, or a way to convince kids to practice abstinence.
It's not the broken bones that hurt the stuntman, it's the heartache caused by an unrequited crush on the leading lady. It's a slow motion car crash, on several levels, in this meta video that imagines Death Cab For Cutie frontman Ben Gibbard as a director for a love story masquerading as an action film.
What starts as a spinning performance — perhaps in homage to a disco ball? — turns into a complex world where Broken Bells singer James Mercer moves from place to place on a rotating set.
Ever wonder what happens after a curbstomp? Probably nothing as clean and appealing as what we see in this new Clipping video by "Wont Work" director Carlos Lopez Estrada. Our headless hero wanders the city with a series of inventive replacements to match and every lyrical twist.