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Tag: Sophie Muller

  • Romance and Yearning, Irish Style: Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s “Stay on Me” Video

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    While Sophie Ellis-Bextor might be a born and raised West London girl, her affinity for Ireland is evident in the video for her latest single, “Stay on Me,” from Perimenopop. Working once again with her fellow Sophie, Ms. Muller, the romantic vision for the narrative is immediately apparent in the first shot, which features Ellis-Bextor silhouetted against the sea in front of her as the black veil she’s wearing whips in the wind. Waves crashing before her, there’s an instant Wuthering Heights kind of feel to it (much to Emerald Fennell’s dismay). All self-torture and seemingly endless waiting.

    In the next scene, Ellis-Bextor, outfitted in a very “Victorian-chic” kind of way (complete with her updo of a braided hairstyle), is shown behind the counter of a pub that the viewer later learns is Mike Murt’s in Cahersiveen. Though, even before that, there were plenty of signs that the setting is in County Kerry. Case in point, Ellis-Bextor standing next to an “old-timey” vehicle while perched on Valentia Island Car Ferry. Not to mention later being perched atop the Kerry Cliffs, a key part of the scenery of the video’s location, of which she remarked on her Instagram account, “Obsessed with the beauty of this place.” That much comes across throughout “Stay on Me,” itself an extremely romantic and dreamy track (as are most on Perimenopop). This manifest in the overall theme of the lyrics, which sound, at times, Selena Gomez-y because she’s actually one of the co-writers (along with Julia Michaels, Caroline Ailin and Thomas Hull). And they’re lyrics that are in direct contrast to most pop songs by women in that they suggest an extreme confidence in her lover’s fidelity.

    Hence, Ellis-Bextor’s beatific delivery of the verse, “All his fine flirtation/Only lives for me/Such a sweet sensation/That I’m all he sees.” (And, who knows, it’s possible that Gomez was the one who thought of that verse when thinking of her relationship with Benny Blanco.) She then switches to addressing her lover directly in the chorus, “You can have your pick here in this room/Something in the way you move [yes, that feels like an overt nod to George Harrison]/Everyone’s got their eye/Got their eye on you/But I know there’s nothing they can do/‘Cause his eyes stay on me”—switching back to the third person for that last line. Thus, clearly setting herself apart as a POV-alternating queen.

    And, talking of alternating points of view, one of the ongoing through lines of the video is Ellis-Bextor acting as though she’s reading from a script to memorize her dialogue. Which is, of course, nothing more than the lyrics of the song. As for the elderly man occasionally shown in the passenger side (or is it the driver’s side, since this is England we’re talking about?) of the “automobile” (a befitting word for its aesthetic) parked on the Valentia Island Car Ferry, perhaps he’s meant to be the “director,” of sorts, of whatever made-up project she’s rehearsing for.

    The intensity with which she continues to “study her lines” continues in another scene involving a fresh location: some abandoned-looking mini chateau (or what the Irish would call a “manor”) that she retreats into to keep poring over her script, which Muller closes in on to reveal that, yes, in fact, it contains the lyrics to “Stay on Me,” marked up by Ellis-Bextor, who has now done a hair and wardrobe change for the sake of this simple scene that features her sitting on the staircase of the manor and scribbling fake notes onto her lyrics.

    In the next instance of Muller offering up a new location that the viewer hasn’t previously seen, Ellis-Bextor drives up the coast, still with the inexplicable elderly man in tow—something about this giving Madonna carting around an old lady in her car (one of which ends up being stolen) throughout the “What It Feels Like for a Girl” video. Stopping at one point to hang out on the abovementioned cliffs, Muller provides plenty of “romance and yearning, Irish style” via her lush visuals. Ones that, of course, aren’t difficult to create considering how photogenic this part of Ireland is.

    Of course, all these shots of “yearning” (/randomly memorizing lines in a manner that makes it look like she’s going to play the part of Eva Perón in a remake of Evita) belie the motif of the song, which is, as the bridge puts it, “They can try/But his eyes stay on me/Yes tonight, yes tonight and for life/His eyes stay on me.” So it is that the video almost suggests a touch of erotomania on Ellis-Bextor’s part, for this man she keeps sounding so sure of is nowhere to be found (unless one counts the three old codgers who stare at her while she’s sitting at Mike Murt’s).

    As the video draws to a close, Muller and Ellis-Bextor persist in capitalizing on the Irish setting with the inclusion of a pair of donkeys (see also: The Banshees of Inisherin) framed in the doorway of the manor, adding to the idyllic tincture of the visuals. This prompting Ellis-Bextor to remark on social media, “This is my 19th music video with Sophie Muller and we always have so much fun—I really trust her. It’s our first video involving donkeys though.” And, as Ellis-Bextor closes the door behind her to join said donkeys in the garden (or, to use a less romantic word, “yard”), one is left to imagine that maybe she will meet up with this “oh so steady” bloke of hers offscreen.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Kylie Minogue’s “Tension,” Er, Comes Across Like a Vibrator-Related Self-Love Anthem

    Kylie Minogue’s “Tension,” Er, Comes Across Like a Vibrator-Related Self-Love Anthem

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    Likely wanting to ramp up the special effects and overall “high-concept” nature of her latest video so as to at least visually one-up “Padam Padam” (since it’s all but impossible to do that sonically), Kylie Minogue brings us her second single from Tension…called none other than “Tension.” Although Minogue could just as easily be talking to/about a man in the song, it sounds, more often than not, as though she’s directing her own hand. As it wields a vibrator.

    Almost as if to confirm that theory, Sophie Muller (who also directed “Padam Padam,” in addition to many other of Minogue’s videos) features a lot of different Minogues pointing at and nearly touching each other (delayed gratification makes for a more intense “release,” after all). These suggestive maneuvers transpire after an “original” Minogue enters something like a “pleasure dome” (except it’s square-shaped) bedecked with a blue neon line of light outlining its rooftop. An element of Little Red Riding Hood then quickly takes hold as we fully perceive the ensemble Minogue is wearing while she walks toward the light of the door beckoning to her from her place in the darkness of night. And that look is decidedly, let’s say, “Madeline-chic” (it’s the chapeau, really)—with more than a dash of Red Riding Hood at play. 

    As she enters deeper into the “abyss,” a platinum blonde Control Room Kylie watches her on the screen before Muller quickly cuts to a TV Transmission Kylie, flickering in and out like so many static-y airwaves with her flaming red hair and shimmering silver dress. Confidently assuring, “I’m a star, babe-babe-babe/Do this all day-day-day/Cool like sorbet-bet-bet/​​Bet you can’t wait-wait-wait/Hands up on me-me-me/Hot like chilay-lay-lay.” Clearly titillated by all the food analogies, Madeline Kylie gets hot (like chili) enough under the collar to remove her scarf from her neck as Control Room Kylie keeps fiddling with her knobs (no innuendo intended). We then see Madeline Kylie sitting in front of a mirror removing her hat and tousling her hair as she coos, “Every day and every night/It’s the way I make you feel/Baby, there ain’t nothing better/And I could do this forever with you.” The fact that she’s gazing at herself in the mirror when she says this only adds to the notion that this is a self-love anthem…and one with more than occasional “vibratory” undertones.

    Pointing at herself as Muller flashes to the three different versions of Kylie we’ve seen thus far, she then chirps the pre-chorus, “All night, touch me right there (doo-doo-doo-doo)/Touch me right there (doo-doo-doo-doo)/Touch me right there/Baby, break the tension.” By now, TV Transmission Kylie has busted out of the screen she was confined by and proceeds to dance salaciously as Control Room Kylie presses and adjusts her joystick with especial sexual flair. The 70s-esque motel room (sort of in the spirit of the Pink Motel from the “Padam Padam” video) that Madeline Kylie has been feelin’ herself in suddenly erupts into dance floor status, complete with the type of disco lights that Minogue so loves as the chorus urges, “Oh, my God, touch me right there/Almost there, touch me right there/Don’t be shy, boy, I don’t bite/You know where, touch me right, ta-ta.”

    Taking us back to the hallway where Madeline Kylie first went down the rabbit hole, so to speak, now Control Room Kylie appears there too, demanding, “Call me Kylie-lie-lie/Don’t imita-ta-tate/Cool like sorbet-bet-bet (cool like sorbet-bet-bet)/I’m your esca-a-ape/I’m your vacay-ay-ay/Hot like chilay-lay-lay.” And, by the way, all this talk of sorbets and chili feels like nothing more than a recipe for having a terrible time in the bathroom. Surely something less diarrheaic could have been used to rhyme with sorbet. Even if she had said, “Hot like gravay-vay-vay” (a.k.a. “gravy”). Oh well. 

    It appears none of the Kylies have concerns about bowel movements on their mind as they dispense with mirror-based narcissism altogether and decide to sit at a table across from each other and repeat the mantra, “Every day and every night/It’s the way I make you feel/Baby, there ain’t nothing better/And I could do this forever with you.” Then, as if to prove how much they love themselves (and, probably more to the point, touching themselves…you know, to release tension), the two seem to use the power of that self-love to conjure an entirely new Kylie. This one billable as Showgirl Kylie (a nod, no doubt, to her 2005 Showgirl: The Greatest Hits Tour). Appearing in miniature with her bright yellow feather boa, feather headdress and coordinating sequined leotard, she then gets swapped out in favor of TV Transmission Kylie before Muller briefly goes back to mini Showgirl Kylie kicking her legs up in delight on the table. A flash to the control room then shows more switch flipping, complete with a red button that reads: “Touch Here.”

    It’s at this point that Minogue harkens us back to a lyric she used in 2007’s “The One,” during which she uses the simile, “Close to touch/Like Michelangelo”—this being an obvious allusion to The Creation of Adam. And in the video for “Tension,” she mimics that same pose of God reaching out to touch his finger to Adam’s, with TV Transmission Kylie in the God role and Madeline Kylie in the Adam role. All the while, Control Room Kylie keeps furiously pressing, pushing and switching her buttons before an array of more Kylie facsimiles appear to dance in silhouette next to TV Transmission Kylie. Then the facsimiles of mini Showgirl Kylie appear, too…just before everything gets buckwild and all the different Kylies seem to coexist in the same room within this “house of fantasies.” One in which Kylie can love on herself literally all she wants and apparently make no subtle allusion about touching herself “right there” to get her…satisfaction. It all smacks of The Divinyls’ “I Touch Myself,” as a matter of fact. And yes, it seems as though when Kylie thinks about “you” (read: herself), she does touch herself. Exclusively in this remote square-shaped building that leads somewhere much deeper

    Walking out of the structure at the end of the video, Madeline Kylie no longer has her hat on (hat snatched instead of wig, one supposes), and her body flickers in and out with shimmery static flair that emulates TV Transmission Kylie. Clearly, she absorbed some of the orgasmic good energy from her other selves in there. After all, who knows how to please a woman better than, well, herself?

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    Genna Rivieccio

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