Music Video of the Day: Wouldn’t It Be Good by Nik Kershaw (1984, dir. Storm Thorgerson)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qH4CT4f7fk

From what I can tell, this is the first time Kershaw and Thorgerson made a music video together. They would end up doing at least four of them. It’s not often that you come across a music video where the Wikipedia article describes the whole thing in detail. I guess it makes it easier for me.

The music video for “Wouldn’t It Be Good”, directed by Storm Thorgerson, was released in 1984 and received heavy rotation on MTV, which helped the song reach No. 46 on the US charts. It used chroma key technology to achieve the alien suit’s special effects.

The video opens with two men talking, followed by heavy breathing. Nik Kershaw, wearing a vintage white suit, crosses in front of an antique car, carrying a briefcase. He enters ornate doors, and the music starts to play. Kershaw climbs stairs inside the building, enters a room and leans against the door. He opens his hand and lets a rock fall. His clothing and haircut transform, becoming 80s fashion, and the suit plays vague scenes. He crosses to a bank of equipment, adjusts dials and then looks out the window. He begins to sing. Sitting down, he presses buttons on a bulky remote, and more definite video scenes begin to play on his white clothing, showing people, shoes, grass, a satellite dish and other items that illustrate what he sings.

Kershaw opens French doors and exits to a balcony, leans against a column to sing. Below him, a vagrant has built a fire in a steel drum to keep warm. Kershaw goes back inside the room, and something lights the window. He takes a tube from his equipment, leaves the room. In the hallway, a woman is amazed at the scenes playing on his suit. He meets a little girl with ponytails, bumps into a man on the stairs, while scenes related to them play on the suit. Outside, he looks around, sees a woman walking a dog and the two men who opened the video. He falls in the street and a crowd gathers around him. He crawls away, manages to get up and run. The scenes on his suit have stopped playing now, and the crowd watches him run away. The white clothing stands out as he runs into darkness toward a horizon that is only faintly lighted. He sees the transmission from a satellite dish, runs toward it. He stops at the dish and dissolves into static.

What am I supposed to add to that? How about this from an interview he gave to The Telegraph in 2014:

Q: What did your parents think about you leaving halfway through your A-levels?
A: I had one conversation with my father about it. He said: “Are you sure?” I replied yes and he just said: “All right then.” He knew I wanted to be in the music business and he himself was a frustrated architect working for the local council. He would have run away to the circus if he could. I ended up as a pop star and my brother ended up training dolphins.

The part about this song and others paying his kids way through school is more relevant, but I like that story. Yay, my father didn’t have a problem with me leaving mid-schooling. So, I ended up doing a music video where I was followed around a giant question mark by The Riddler and my brother went into training dolphins. I think I was also an alien who wore a bright white suit that was connected to a rock in another video.

I love his answer to the question about whether a “jetset lifestyle” came after his high period died down considering some people probably know him via Doc Hollywood:

No, I’m a country boy at heart and was never flash with money. I didn’t have a flash car until my mid-life crisis when I splashed out on a Porsche. I hate waste and hate having the p‑‑‑ taken out of me. That’s what happens when you have money: people take the p‑‑‑ out of the high fashion accessories and flash cars. I never felt the urge to go out and blow money.

I can also add that according to The London Salad, the video was shot inside the St. James’s Hotel. At the time it wasn’t in use, but it appears to be up and running again.

If you recognize the song, but not the video, then it’s probably because it was on the soundtrack for the movie Pretty In Pink (1986).

Enjoy!

30 Days Of Surrealism:

  1. Street Of Dreams by Rainbow (1983, dir. Storm Thorgerson)
  2. Rock ‘n’ Roll Children by Dio (1985, dir. Daniel Kleinman)
  3. The Thin Wall by Ultravox (1981, dir. Russell Mulcahy)
  4. Take Me Away by Blue Öyster Cult (1983, dir. Richard Casey)
  5. Here She Comes by Bonnie Tyler (1984, dir. ???)
  6. Do It Again by Wall Of Voodoo (1987, dir. ???)
  7. The Look Of Love by ABC (1982, dir. Brian Grant)
  8. Eyes Without A Face by Billy Idol (1984, dir. David Mallet)
  9. Somebody New by Joywave (2015, dir. Keith Schofield)
  10. Twilight Zone by Golden Earring (1982, dir. Dick Maas)
  11. Schism by Tool (2001, dir. Adam Jones)
  12. Freaks by Live (1997, dir. Paul Cunningham)
  13. Loverboy by Billy Ocean (1984, dir. Maurice Phillips)
  14. Talking In Your Sleep by The Romantics (1983, dir. ???)
  15. Talking In Your Sleep by Bucks Fizz (1984, dir. Dieter Trattmann)
  16. Sour Girl by Stone Temple Pilots (2000, dir. David Slade)
  17. The Ink In The Well by David Sylvian (1984, dir. Anton Corbijn)
  18. Red Guitar by David Sylvian (1984, dir. Anton Corbijn)
  19. Don’t Come Around Here No More by Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers (1985, dir. Jeff Stein)
  20. Sweating Bullets by Megadeth (1993, dir. Wayne Isham)
  21. Clear Nite, Moonlight or Clear Night, Moonlight by Golden Earring (1984, dir. Dick Maas)
  22. Clowny Clown Clown by Crispin Glover (1989, dir. Crispin Glover)
  23. Black Hole Sun by Soundgarden (1994, dir. Howard Greenhalgh)
  24. Total Eclipse Of The Heart by Bonnie Tyler (1983, dir. Russell Mulcahy)
  25. Harden My Heart by Quarterflash (1981, dir. ???)
  26. Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This) by Eurythmics (1983, dir. Jon Roseman & Dave Stewart)
  27. Far Side Of Crazy by Wall Of Voodoo (1985, dir. ???)
  28. Wide Boy by Nik Kershaw (1985, dir. Storm Thorgerson)

Music Video of the Day: Wide Boy by Nik Kershaw (1985, dir. Storm Thorgerson)


I wanted to hold off spotlighting a Nik Kershaw video for a bit, but I might as well polish off this surreal thing I started months ago with some of his videos.

I swear I must have heard this song as a kid. I just can’t find any evidence to support that memory. My best guess is that since I did watch Doc Hollywood (1991) a lot as a kid, even though Chesney Hawkes was the one to sing Kershaw’s The One And Only, I still recognize the style. That song was also used in a movie called Buddy’s Song. I haven’t seen the film yet, but this song seems to fit the plot summary on IMDb as well as that one:

Buddy is an aspiring teenager who is a very good musician and has pressure to go further than his Dad’s teddy boy rocker days. However when his father is sent away for a year for covering up for criminal Des it puts further strain on the family relationship. When Terry is released things get steadily harder while Buddy’s career gets rosier.

Like other Kershaw videos, it’s ambitious. The song doesn’t start till 2:20. Up till then, we see Kershaw sitting in an apartment drinking when we hear what sounds like the TARDIS before revealing a guy who appears to be there to claim his soul. I guess Kershaw’s character sold his soul to have overnight success we see in the rest of the video. At least that’s my interpretation of this version of the video, considering the chorus.

There’s a slightly different version posted below.

There is some change with the color, but the big difference is that it cuts out the beginning of the video and has an alternate ending. We see the doctors walk away and the video ends. In the other one, they pull the Nik Kershaw headshot away from their faces, and we see the man from the start of the video carrying Kershaw’s body before Kershaw fades into the ever growing pixels. I’m not sure why they changed it other than that people might be confused as to who he is if they had already edited out the start of the video for runtime.

And no, I didn’t pick out this song because it technically ties together yesterday’s post of a Huey Lewis & The News horror-themed music video with this one. The connection is that Roger Daltrey was in Buddy’s Song, and he and Huey would go on to be in .com for Murder (2002) together.

Thorgerson of album art fame directed this, and several other Kershaw videos.

Prolific art director and production designer Nigel Talamo was an art director on the video along with Caroline Greville-Morris who has also done a fair amount of work as an art director. She also worked on feature films as a production designer.

Enjoy!

30 Days Of Surrealism:

  1. Street Of Dreams by Rainbow (1983, dir. Storm Thorgerson)
  2. Rock ‘n’ Roll Children by Dio (1985, dir. Daniel Kleinman)
  3. The Thin Wall by Ultravox (1981, dir. Russell Mulcahy)
  4. Take Me Away by Blue Öyster Cult (1983, dir. Richard Casey)
  5. Here She Comes by Bonnie Tyler (1984, dir. ???)
  6. Do It Again by Wall Of Voodoo (1987, dir. ???)
  7. The Look Of Love by ABC (1982, dir. Brian Grant)
  8. Eyes Without A Face by Billy Idol (1984, dir. David Mallet)
  9. Somebody New by Joywave (2015, dir. Keith Schofield)
  10. Twilight Zone by Golden Earring (1982, dir. Dick Maas)
  11. Schism by Tool (2001, dir. Adam Jones)
  12. Freaks by Live (1997, dir. Paul Cunningham)
  13. Loverboy by Billy Ocean (1984, dir. Maurice Phillips)
  14. Talking In Your Sleep by The Romantics (1983, dir. ???)
  15. Talking In Your Sleep by Bucks Fizz (1984, dir. Dieter Trattmann)
  16. Sour Girl by Stone Temple Pilots (2000, dir. David Slade)
  17. The Ink In The Well by David Sylvian (1984, dir. Anton Corbijn)
  18. Red Guitar by David Sylvian (1984, dir. Anton Corbijn)
  19. Don’t Come Around Here No More by Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers (1985, dir. Jeff Stein)
  20. Sweating Bullets by Megadeth (1993, dir. Wayne Isham)
  21. Clear Nite, Moonlight or Clear Night, Moonlight by Golden Earring (1984, dir. Dick Maas)
  22. Clowny Clown Clown by Crispin Glover (1989, dir. Crispin Glover)
  23. Black Hole Sun by Soundgarden (1994, dir. Howard Greenhalgh)
  24. Total Eclipse Of The Heart by Bonnie Tyler (1983, dir. Russell Mulcahy)
  25. Harden My Heart by Quarterflash (1981, dir. ???)
  26. Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This) by Eurythmics (1983, dir. Jon Roseman & Dave Stewart)
  27. Far Side Of Crazy by Wall Of Voodoo (1985, dir. ???)

Music Video of the Day: Doing It All For My Baby by Huey Lewis & The News (1987, dir. ???)


Happy Halloween!

Early this year I started trying to figure out videos I could do for October. I didn’t think I was going to be able to come close to filling 31 days. But I did know that I could fill one day. And that’s today with the nearly 8 minute horror-themed video for Doing It All For My Baby by Huey Lewis & The News. Unfortunately, I am in no position to write about this the way I wanted to at the moment. I’m sorry.

Let me include the entry from Wikipedia that covers who to look for:

The music video for “Doing It All for My Baby” was a parody of monster movies and was over 7 minutes long. Huey appears as himself, the Dr. Frankenstein character, and the singing monster. Dracula is portrayed by bass player Mario Cippolina, who is shown placing his own disembodied head in a jar on a table (the camera then pans along the table to show the jarred heads of the rest of the News, echoing the buried-in-the-sand scene of their “If This Is It” video). Mario also appears as half of the two-headed creature with drummer Bill Gibson. Igor is played by keyboarder Sean Hopper. The Tower of Power horn section (Greg Adams, Lee Thornburg, Richard Elliot, Emilio Castillo and Stephen Kupka) is shown chained to the back wall playing their horns while Frankenstein/Huey sings into a steaming test tube. The video ends with Igor foolishly throwing a large switch, turning the singing monster back into Huey and the bride of Frankenstein’s monster screaming in horror.

I’ll rattle off some other things too look for as well:

  1. The Mystery Machine
  2. The News accidentally killing Huey.
  3. The News deciding that a dead Huey Lewis isn’t anything to cry over, and moving on.
  4. The Wizard Of Oz sock.
  5. The zombie that gets bonked on the head like at least one does in Lucio Fulci’s Zombie (1979)
  6. The sign: Mill Valley is a place Huey grew up. The bar on the cover of Sports is in Mill Valley. This year Huey went back there to perform. And the year before this video, 1986, they performed in Frankfurt.
  7. The bird.
  8. Notice that they somehow get Huey out from under the car with no explanation after two failed attempts to pull him out, and almost sawing off his leg.
  9. The joke about Dracula recognizing them because of course their bass player dressed as Dracula would recognize the band he’s a part of.
  10. The decapitation of The News, and the fact that more than just their heads being cut clean off must have happened judging by the state of their faces.
  11. Doc Brown as Dr. Frankenstein.
  12. The horn section from Tower Of Power chained to the wall.
  13. Don’t try to be Jimi Hendrix if you wear dentures.
  14. There are easier ways to plug in an electric guitar than an electric chair.
  15. Finally, the reference to the “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder” episode of The Twilight Zone when Bride Of Frankenstein screams at the sight of Huey Lewis as himself.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Ghostbusters by Ray Parker Jr. (1984, dir. Ivan Reitman)


I wish the literal video for this was still up. Oh, well.

All these years later, I still don’t have any idea why she goes into that house. I guess we are supposed to believe she lives there with these two kids that miss their cue?

These other kids nail it.

Despite finding lists of all the celebrities in this video, I have no idea who this guy is that Ray Parker Jr. becomes for this bit.

I also wonder why she didn’t see him while turning away from the moving table to go to the window.

In the window is footage of the movie that has aged horribly. Parker Jr. is blue screened in there for this famous shot.

He ain’t afraid of no ghost. A lawsuit on the other the hand, that’s a different matter. I hope this music video doesn’t remind me of a Huey Lewis & The News video as well.

Now Ray Parker Jr. stands creepily outside of her window.

This is looking familiar.

Chevy Chase can call Ghostbusters if he has a ghost problem…

but what about if he gets stuck in Benji again?

Who can he call then?

I knew this looked familiar.

Do You Believe In Love by Huey Lewis & The News (1982)


Do You Believe In Love by Huey Lewis & The News (1982)

I’m sure it’s a coincidence. I just find it humorous to see that considering the lawsuit saying that this song ripped off, to one extent or another, the Huey Lewis & The News song I Want A New Drug. The scene above is from the video that helped kick off their career on MTV and set the tone for their future videos since it was such a success despite being ridiculous. Is the riff in You Crack Me Up…

sound like the same riff from Johnny And Mary by Robert Palmer?

Or is it just me?

What a feeling. Thanks for making that one easy, Irene Cara.

Something tells me that Cindy Harrell was hired by someone who saw the movie Model Behavior (1982), which she was in.


Model Behavior (1982, dir. Bud Gardner)


Model Behavior (1982, dir. Bud Gardner)

From what I’ve read, they just showed up on the set of a movie Candy was shooting to try and get him to make this cameo appearance.

Ray Parker Jr. rising from the top of the stairs like he’s Michael Myers come to kill her. Why?

Or at least scare her. It’s probably a reference to Gozer.

Melissa Gilbert. I have no idea what she’s doing here. I’ve only seen an episode or two of Little House On The Prairie, so I guess there could have been some episodes with ghosts. Some of these cameos feel like they happened because the celebrities were involved with NBC.

Speaking of cameos I can’t explain, it’s former baseball player Ollie Brown.

Boundaries!

I do like that for the majority of the shot it looks like she should be falling over but isn’t.

More people that Parker can summon for some reason.

Don’t worry about them.

Pose for the featured image of this post.

Thank you.

Jeffrey Tambor.

Is it 555-5555…

or 555-2368 as you showed earlier?

George Wendt apparently got in trouble with the Screen Actors Guild for his appearance in this video. I’ll link to the article with that information at the end.

Senator Al Franken.

Now we get a series of confusing cameos.

Danny DeVito. I think this is only the second music video he has ever been in. The other one was for the song Billy Ocean did for The Jewel Of The Nile (1985).

Carly Simon for some reason. She would go on to do the theme song to Working Girl (1988) with Sigourney Weaver. Maybe they were friends. I don’t know.

Umm…one more thing. Have you tried calling the Ghostbusters? No clue as to why Peter Falk is here.

The breakdancing was improvised. So was Parker Jr. pushing Bill Murray around.

I think Teri Garr has one of the best cameos.

Don’t swallow that cigarette, Chevy.

Fun fact: In European and other non-US markets, the “no” sign was flipped.

If you want to read some more information about the video, then follow this link over to ScreenCrush where they have a write-up on the video with information from people who worked on the video.

According to mvdbase, Ivan Reitman directed, Keith Williams wrote the script, Jeff Abelson produced it, Daniel Pearl shot it, and Peter Lippman was the production manager.

If you ever get a chance to watch the literal music video for this, then do so. I doubt it will surface again though seeing as this music video almost didn’t get an official release because of the issues surrounding all the cameos.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: The Evil Eye by Josh Ritter (2013, dir. Philip Niemeyer)


Let me walk you through how I ended up with this video.

At the beginning of the month, Lisa sent me a DM on Twitter with some music videos that might help me to fill 31 days of October. One of them was listed as “The Evil Eye (1972) by Josh Ritter”. I get near the end of this month, and decide to start dipping into these videos. I watched a bit of the video to make sure it’s something I’d like to do. It was. To IMDb I go because Lisa did include the year 1972, so that must mean it is from a movie called The Evil Eye, right?

I find out that there is a 1963 movie called Evil Eye. It also goes under the name of The Girl Who Knew Too Much. Lisa could have made a typo. I found a copy, and watched it.

It didn’t seem to have anything to do with this video other than that it is directed by Mario Bava who would go on to do Lisa And The Devil (1973), which I’d say is more representative of this video. The 1963 Evil Eye has more to do with A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984). A little over two decades prior to Elm Street, John Saxon was in a movie where the female lead was convinced someone was going to come for her at night in her apartment, so she sets up a whole lot of traps to try and catch them. I wonder if Wes Craven saw this movie. I sort of recommend it.

During that same search, I found a movie from 1975 that was also called Evil Eye. That one was harder to track down than the 1963 Evil Eye, but I found it.

Evil Eye (1975, dir. Mario Siciliano)

It has eyes in it that are reminiscent of a Lucio Fulci movie.

Evil Eye (1975, dir. Mario Siciliano)

Evil Eye (1975, dir. Mario Siciliano)

However, while the eyes are certainly present, Evil Hand might have been a more appropriate title.

Evil Eye (1975, dir. Mario Siciliano)

While weird dreams within dreams, unexplained subconscious killings, and a manipulate psychiatrist are revolving around the main character played by Jorge Rivero, the cop below might as well have been in a different movie altogether.

Evil Eye (1975, dir. Mario Siciliano)

This movie doesn’t have much to do with this music video other than that it does share some of the 1970’s look. I recommend the movie only if you enjoyed something like Lisa And The Devil and from what I have read, The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari. It’s been too long since I watched the latter to be sure.

Now I go back to the YouTube video. Someone in the comments section said that Bloody Disgusting brought them there. I had only heard of them from The Cinema Snob review of Black Is Beautiful (1970) where the “doctor” talks about female circumcision, and Snob follows that by saying that “and then Bloody Disgusting will write about the positive sides of female circumcision.” It’s a reference to their review of Eli Roth’s The Green Inferno (2013) where the author goes on for two paragraphs complaining that the film only talks about it as a negative thing. All I have to say in response is to watch the Senegalese film Moolaadé (2004). I’m less looking forward to eventually seeing Roth’s Green Inferno than the 1988 Green Inferno.

The Green Inferno (1988, dir. Antonio Climati)

It’s one of several movies that went by the name of Cannibal Holocaust II.

They have a short Q & A with director Philip Niemeyer on the site. It doesn’t provide a lot of useful information till they ask him about why he combined folk music with horror. He brings up that early 1970’s horror films used that kind of music. He gave two examples. I haven’t seen The Wicker Man (1973). I couldn’t get my hands on a copy on short notice. I could get my hands on a copy of Queens Of Evil (1970), though. Even if the version I had was a bad VHS rip that was dubbed into English.

Queens Of Evil (1970, dir. Tonino Cervi)

Niemeyer was absolutely right about the use of folk music in the video. It’s there for two reasons.

One, actor Raymond Lovelock is also a musician who composed and performed several songs for the movie.

Queens Of Evil (1970, dir. Tonino Cervi)

Also, the movie is about a hippie biker who comes across some witches in the forest who also appear to be hippies living off the grid.

Queens Of Evil (1970, dir. Tonino Cervi)

Queens Of Evil (1970, dir. Tonino Cervi)

I don’t want to spoil the ending, but the devil and its power is a stand-in for the backlash against the free-love and principles that were present among people such as a biker who lives on the road and doesn’t have an apparent fear of sin. I do recommend it.

At times, that movie does look like this video. It’s the one that has the closest ties to it.

Finally, I decided to sit down and write this post only to find that when I did a search again for movies with the title “Evil Eye”, I turned up one more. Lucio Fulci’s film Manhattan Baby (1973) happens to have had the alternate title of Evil Eye.

Manhattan Baby (1982, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Manhattan Baby (1982, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Manhattan Baby (1982, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Manhattan Baby (1982, dir. Lucio Fulci)

It also has a similar effect that we see near the start of the video.

Manhattan Baby (1982, dir. Lucio Fulci)

All of that brings me to the video, which Niemeyer summed up quite nicely in his interview with Bloody Disgusting:

Some definite tropes mark many early ’70s horror films: a satanic and/or a supernatural menace (witchcraft, cultists, vampires), an emphasis on atmosphere, enchanting (often topless) women, a handful of charismatic actors (John Prine, Edwidge Fenech, Pamela Franklin…), analog psychedelic effects, counter-culture protagonists, great acid/prog rock and neo-folk soundtracks, terrific set design, a meandering new wave pacing, an art-damaged narrative sensibility, a nuanced formalism in the photography, and all of these movies–no matter how cheap and trashy–were shot on film. They just look great.

All of these things appeal to me greatly. Don’t know why. Probably something related to childhood.

I guess I could have avoided all those movies. It wasn’t a complete waste of time. I am glad I saw them–especially Queens Of Evil (1970). That is the one I would recommend the strongest out of all of them.

The video does just what Niemeyer said in his interview. It uses a lot of things you’d commonly find in 70’s horror movies before slashers came to dominate horror. I only have a couple of complaints about it.

Why do Hilde Skappel and Katie Flannery look less like they are summoning a special effect, and more like they are having an orgasm at the start of the video?

Maybe that was intentional since the one witch does appear to get jealous when the other one takes an interest in Josh.

A jealousy that appears to culminate in one of them killing the other.

My other complaint is the use of the white dimension for the tarot card scene.

The other shots hold up under HD nicely…

but those scenes don’t, and are a bit jarring when you reach them. Then again, jarring seems to be the right word to describe an edit in the 1975 and 1982 Evil Eye movies, not to mention other 70’s horror films, so what am I complaining about.

They even made a poster for the potential film that could have arisen from what is essentially a trailer for a movie with songs by Josh Ritter.

Dan Forbes was the cinematographer. You can visit his website to see his work as a photographer that includes a black-and-white shot of Jason’s mask.

I hope you appreciate all the pointless movie watching I did in preparation for this post. Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Maniac by Michael Sembello (1983, dir. Adrian Lyne)


Warning: If you’re epileptic, then you might not want to watch the video. It does include some very quick flashing for an extended period of time.

I thought I would go with something that wouldn’t immediately jump to mind for October unless you already know the story behind it.

As closely as this song is associated with Flashdance (1983), it wasn’t originally written for it. It was written with William Lusting’s 1980 film Maniac in mind. I can’t find out for sure if it was written for or was inspired by the movie. Everything I have read seems to indicate the latter. In particular, the fact that it was apparently nominated for an Academy Award, but disqualified because the song wasn’t originally written for Flashdance. It didn’t play in my copy of the film either. It was written for a movie about someone with an obsession for trapping people as they are at a certain place in their life by killing, scalping, and then placing their hair on mannequins. He has other issues intertwined with that as well. The remake explains the motive behind what he does a bit better by expanding his relationship with a photographer who was played by Caroline Munro in the original.

Something that’s amazing to me is that Sembello didn’t change much to get the version we all know from Flashdance. With a few tweaks, you can play this over certain sections of the original film, and it would fit just fine. In addition, there are sections of this video that feel like they were put together in such a way because they would resemble a scene from Maniac.

The part where she’s running in a building while we watch via a tracking shot. That instantly made me think of the scene where the nurse is trying to get away in the subway station.

Maniac (1980, dir. William Lusting)

Also, he hammered the scalps onto the heads of the mannequins.

Maniac (1980, dir. William Lusting)

One last thing that caught my attention was the prostitute at the start of the film who is dressed like she could start dancing, and is shown to be as flexible.

Maniac (1980, dir. William Lusting)

Maniac (1980, dir. William Lusting)

Maniac (1980, dir. William Lusting)

I wouldn’t be surprised if these things were intentional because according to Songfacts, this was the first music video to use nothing but scenes from the movie the song was from. I have a strong feeling that Lyne and editors Bob Lederman, Walt Mulconery, and Bud Smith put those in there for that reason.

The postings of this video on YouTube are numerous, unofficial, and all appear to have been marked for monetization or have a link inserted to where you can buy or rent the movie. That makes sense. In retrospect, this music video acts as a trailer for the movie.

So, there you go, Flashdance for October. If Songfacts is accurate, some of the lyrics originally went like this:

He’s a maniac, maniac that’s for sure
He will kill your cat and nail him to the door

Gruesome. The story is that producer Phil Ramone is the one who got Sembello to write lyrics for “a girl possessed with the passion of a gift for dance.”

All three editors worked on Personal Best (1982). They have all done many things over the years from editing The Karate Kid (1984) to producing a lot of Star Trek to directing Johnny Be Good (1988).

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Something In My House by Dead Or Alive (1986, dir. ???)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bNMTgTRfbs

Yes, I did Creeper by Islands a few days ago. However, that song didn’t spin me right round like a record, baby, right round round round.

I can’t find much information on this one. The song was edited down for the music video. According to Wikipedia, the video is an homage to Jean Cocteau’s Beauty And The Beast. I buy that. It may have been about a decade since I saw that movie, but things like knockers made of human faces definitely remind me of that film. That’s all I can find.

We lost Pete Burns on October 23rd of 2016. On the 24th of this year, we lost Fats Domino. I thought about breaking with the October theme to do the live video of Cheap Trick covering Ain’t That A Shame, but I decided against devoting a whole post to it. Then I decided, I still wanted to include it. So, here is their cover of Ain’t That A Shame performed from where else, than Budokan.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-C-jXJl0Zrg

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Night Boat by Duran Duran (1983, dir. Russell Mulcahy)


I meant to do this video a few days ago, but I’ve been a zombie lately, including today–pun intended.

From the Duran Duran wiki:

“It is possible that the video is a homage to the Italian horror film Zombi 2, with settings and zombies that look very much like the ones in the film.”

That is exactly what I thought of when I started it. This video screams “Italian horror film.” The shot below that shows up within the first ten seconds immediately made me think of Italian horror.

It took me awhile to recall what movie that shot was reminding me of. It’s Come And Out Play (2012). That was a remake of the Spanish film Who Can Kill A Child? (1976). Italian. Spanish. It’s all the same in this context. A good example is Amando de Ossorio’s film Zombi 8 (1975).

From IMDb

You can read Lisa’s review of it here.

The lines that Simon Le Bon speaks are part of a speech that Mercutio delivers in Romeo And Juliet. It’s probably there because it announces to the audience that there is something wrong with him in addition to everything else.

As for the similarities to Zombie/Zombi 2/Zombie Flesh Eaters (1979), I only watched the movie for the first time the other day. It does bear some resemblance to it. On a superficial level, I would think of that movie. I would also think of The Blind Dead films, as well other Lucio Fulci horror movies. The following shots remind me of both City Of The Living Dead (1980) and Zombie (1979).

City Of The Living Dead (1980, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Zombi (1980, dir. Lucio Fulci)

The zombies bear a resemblance to the ones in Zombie.

Zombie (1979, dir. Lucio Fulci)

We also get a cameo appearance from the Caribbean crabs since this video was shot in Antigua and the island sequences of Zombie were shot a bit west in Santa Domingo.

Zombie (1979, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Even the Night Boat itself ties back to Zombie. The beginning of Zombie starts with a boat, not too dissimilar from the one Le Bon leaves on, arriving in New York City with a zombie onboard so that Fulci could have zombies walking on the Brooklyn bridge at the end of the movie while drivers below go about their day.

Zombie (1979, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Zombie (1979, dir. Lucio Fulci)

Zombie (1979, dir. Lucio Fulci)

This is possibly my new favorite Duran Duran music video. It’s the complete opposite of Rio. There’s nothing glamorous about this. It’s just stylish. They even worked in references to Rio.

Rio by Duran Duran (1982)

Rio by Duran Duran (1982)

The boat is a reference too. And, what is her name this time, Le Bon?

She is the fairies’ midwife, and she comes
In shape no bigger than an agate stone
On the forefinger of an alderman,
Drawn with a team of little atomi
Over men’s noses as they lie asleep.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Dr. Mabuse by Propaganda (1984, dir. Anton Corbijn)


According to mvdbase, this is Corbijn’s third music video. I remember in an interview he gave that he said he considers this to be his first music video. I can understand why. I kind of like Hockey by Palais Schaumburg and Beat Box by Art Of Noise, but this is much better. It is a black-and-white visual feast containing everything from M to The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari, as you would expect from a German band. He tried to re-create the experience of watching something like the movie Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler and other works of German Expressionism.

I didn’t see it in their Wikipedia page, but The Testament Of Dr. Mabuse was banned by Joseph Goebbels when he became Minister of Propaganda. I wonder if that had anything to do with the choice of their name. It would make sense.

Enjoy!