Music videos have long been a proving ground for some of the most innovative filmmaking ideas. Sometimes those breakthroughs come as stylistic flourishes. Other times, it means breaking down a simple story to its purest form.
If the 2000s were the decade when music videos embraced the internet, the 2010s were left to reckon with what the internet became. Over 10 years when viral moments were valuable cultural currency, some videos seemed perfectly tailor-made to create them. Whether manufactured to become a sensation or becoming so by pure chance, music videos embraced the weird spirit and sobering reality of the overall trajectory of the decade.
So, acknowledging that winnowing down all that time and creativity to 25 picks is going to inevitably leave out some worthy contributions, here’s our attempt at highlighting the best of what the art form had to offer:
25. Rob Cantor — “Shia Labeouf (Live)” (dir. Scott Uhlfelder)
The 2010s were absurd,...
If the 2000s were the decade when music videos embraced the internet, the 2010s were left to reckon with what the internet became. Over 10 years when viral moments were valuable cultural currency, some videos seemed perfectly tailor-made to create them. Whether manufactured to become a sensation or becoming so by pure chance, music videos embraced the weird spirit and sobering reality of the overall trajectory of the decade.
So, acknowledging that winnowing down all that time and creativity to 25 picks is going to inevitably leave out some worthy contributions, here’s our attempt at highlighting the best of what the art form had to offer:
25. Rob Cantor — “Shia Labeouf (Live)” (dir. Scott Uhlfelder)
The 2010s were absurd,...
- 11/27/2019
- by Leo Garcia and Steve Greene
- Indiewire
What's one celebrity impression when you can do 29 in less than four minutes - while singing, no less? That's exactly what singer-songwriter Rob Cantor seemed to do in his viral video, but in a behind-the-scenes clip released later, we learn the truth: Rob had the help of 11 impressionists. As for Rob, he admitted, "I cannot do a single celebrity impression." To create the viral video, the impressionists recorded themselves singing Rob's original song called "Perfect," with the group covering everyone from Britney Spears to Adam Sandler to Gwen Stefani. Watch his lip-sync performance in the original video above, then watch the making of the video below.
- 12/29/2014
- by Laura-Marie-Meyers
- Popsugar.com
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