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==Music video==
==Music video==
The music video for "The Denial Twist" was directed by [[Michel Gondry]]. Like some of his previous work (namely [[The Chemical Brothers]]' "[[Let Forever Be]]" and [[Kylie Minogue|Kylie Minogue's]] "[[Come into My World (song)|Come Into My World]]"), the video features a spectacular array of visual effects as it follows The White Stripes from a talk show performance to a late night drive back to an apartment. As the camera pans in a circle, Jack and Meg appear distorted. This refers to the lyric of the song; that what people think is true is often shaped by the context in which information is presented to them and their willingness to be deceived—even by themselves—as various aspects of the video radically shift in perspective, size, proportion and believability.
The music video for "The Denial Twist" was directed by [[Michel Gondry]]. Like some of his previous work (namely [[The Chemical Brothers]]' "[[Let Forever Be]]" and [[Kylie Minogue|Kylie Minogue's]] "[[Come into My World (song)|Come Into My World]]"), the video features a spectacular array of visual effects as it follows The White Stripes from a talk show performance to a late night drive back to an apartment. As the camera pans in a circle, Jack and Meg appear distorted. This refers to the lyric of the song; that what people think is true is often shaped by the context in which information is presented to them and their willingness to be deceived—even by themselves—as various aspects of the video radically shift in perspective, size, proportion and believability.

The optical illusion used in the video is the technique of [[forced perspective]], through an [[Ames room]] and distortions derived from it.


[[Image:TheDenialTwistVideo.jpg|left|170px|thumb|Conan O'Brien in the music video for "The Denial Twist."]]
[[Image:TheDenialTwistVideo.jpg|left|170px|thumb|Conan O'Brien in the music video for "The Denial Twist."]]

Revision as of 13:14, 12 May 2009

"The Denial Twist"
Song
B-side"Shelter of Your Arms", "As Ugly As I Seem"

"The Denial Twist" is the third single released from American alternative rock band The White Stripes' 2005 album, Get Behind Me Satan.

Track listing

  • CD Version
  1. "The Denial Twist" - 2:35
  2. "Shelter of Your Arms" - 3:30
  • Alternate 7 inch version
  1. "The Denial Twist" (Live on KCRW)
  2. "As Ugly As I Seem" (Live on KCRW)

Music video

The music video for "The Denial Twist" was directed by Michel Gondry. Like some of his previous work (namely The Chemical Brothers' "Let Forever Be" and Kylie Minogue's "Come Into My World"), the video features a spectacular array of visual effects as it follows The White Stripes from a talk show performance to a late night drive back to an apartment. As the camera pans in a circle, Jack and Meg appear distorted. This refers to the lyric of the song; that what people think is true is often shaped by the context in which information is presented to them and their willingness to be deceived—even by themselves—as various aspects of the video radically shift in perspective, size, proportion and believability.

The optical illusion used in the video is the technique of forced perspective, through an Ames room and distortions derived from it.

Conan O'Brien in the music video for "The Denial Twist."

The creators of the distorted props, Jeff Everett and John Furgason, won a Music Video Production Association Award for Art Direction in 2006.[1]

Conan O'Brien makes a cameo appearance in the video; The White Stripes had been a week-long musical guest on Late Night with Conan O'Brien when they were promoting Elephant. The square-headed O'Brien doll in the video was a reference to a similar one given to the comedian at the end of their week-long stay on the show. The plaster blow-up was actually created by Gondry.

Writer Tom Breihan, who runs the Status Ain't Hood blog at the Village Voice website, also appears in the video. He blogged about his experience shooting the video before it came out, which led to Jack White dissing him in an interview with the British magazine NME.

This is Gondry's fourth video with The White Stripes, after "Fell in Love with a Girl", "Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground" and "The Hardest Button to Button".

The song is also the final 3" record made for the triple inchophone. However, it was never on general sale and only Jack himself had them to give out to fans, friends and family. These 3" records are extremely rare and very few have ever come up for sale on eBay.

References

  1. ^ Director-file.com. "White Stripes ·· The Denial Twist". Retrieved 2009-01-09.

External links