Our music video is about relationships. Most conventional music videos about relationships are about the woman seeking revenge for issues caused by the man in the relationship, however the male in our video has more serious thoughts than just seeking revenge. The title of the song I RanYou Down immediately gives the audience and idea about the story line of the video. We used the songs lyrics to our advantage to create a red herring whether he actually did run over his girlfriend. The storyline and message of our music video is subjective, there is no definite ending, at first we wanted to create three endings and let a focus group decide which one was most effective. However one we began filming we realised we didn't have appropriate material and locations to film all three.
While we were researching successful music videos in class we came across My Favourite Game by The Cardigans, at first the videodidn't seem to make much sense, but after a while i grew too like it. I had never seen the video before but had heard the song. The video was produced and directed by Jonas Akerlund over three days in the Mojave desert in California, and was rumoured to have cost £220,000. The video shows the bands lead singer Nina Persson recklessly driving an old car through the desert trying to make other cars crash. At the start of the video she is trying to find a suitable rock to keep the accelerator onto make sure the car will continue if she jumps out. So at the very start of the video we know she has plans to crash the car, the title My Favourite Game g
ives makesyou believe she is playing sort of Russian Roulette . The video created some controversy when it was first released in 1998, the video was consequently banned or an edited version shown where all of the crashes and the dangerous driving were taken out. Jonas Akerlund knew the video would cause some controversy so he created five different versions with varying degrees of violence and blood. Many European channels in
cluding MTV UK only played an edited version of the version of the video because they believed it would cause and increase in "joyriding" and cause car accidents amongst teenage drivers. The video achieved substantially success and was placed at 95 on channel 4's 100 greatest music video.
We watched this video a few times before filming the car scenes to give us some ideas about different angels we could use, at first the carscenes were very difficult to plan. After watching the video we discovered some easy and effective shots, however once in the car on the day we found it difficult to replicate the angels we had seen. We managed to replicate a few of the angels in the Cardigans video, the image on the left shows one of our basic angels the "rear mirror view". What we aimed to do was take some of the aggressive driving seen in My Favourite Game but do it in a controlled way which was safe but looked realistic in order to produce the red herring; was she run over or not?
Also the most obvious convention our music video uses is the band scene. Music videos are used to showcase and promote the artist or band and in most videos today band scenes are a main component. We filmed the band scene in our schools drama studio using the lighting to shift the focus of the scene on to the lead singer with the two guitarist in the background. In the music video industry today it is mostly rock bands which use band scenes in their videos, as in pop most of the artist do not produce or play the instruments that feature in there songs.
Other than a band scene and a car scene the other conventions we have used in our video are romance and lip syncing. Our video doesn't challenge media conventions just uses them to create a story.