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- Music video for the hit Bon Jovi song, Always.
- Music video for "Back to Black" by Amy Winehouse. Amy mourns and attends a funeral while singing about her failed love affair.
- Michael Jackson's music video for his song "Bad".
- A music video for Eminem's song "Stan".
- Music Industry's (Aka Taylor Swift) nightmares, and her issues with depersonalization and self-hatred, critiquing her shortcomings and societal pressures.
- Music video for Madonna's song Like a Prayer.
- Official music video for "Love Me Like You Hate Me" by Rainsford.
- On location in the wilderness, a volatile young actress falls in love with her leading man in Taylor Swift's music video for her song Wildest Dreams.
- The video is based on Beauty and the Beast and The Phantom of the Opera. Bob Keane did Meat Loaf's make-up, which took up to two hours to apply. The make-up was designed to be simple and scary, yet "with the ability to make him sympathetic." It went over budget, and was filmed in 90 °F (32 °C) heat, across four days. According to one executive, it "probably had the budget of Four Weddings and a Funeral." It is the abridged seven-minute single version, rather than the twelve-minute album version. Michael Bay directed the music video.
- A promotional video for his 1995 song "Earth Song".
- We join Jeremy Renner on his journey of recovery as a father healing from a life threatening accident. After reminiscing on previous memories with his daughter, Ava, there is a newfound respect for the concept of time. He asks her to "Wait" for him.
- A music video for Guns N' Roses's song "November Rain".
- Two teenage girls test the waters of their relationship to the disapproval of a jealous boyfriend.
- The music video preview sparked criticism a few hours after release. The video features various events from Germany's history such as the Middle Ages, The Holocaust, World War 2, and the Berlin Wall; as well as others such as scenes in space. A black woman appears throughout the video. The video was directed by Specter Berlin and was released online on 28 March 2019 at 6:00 PM CET, following a 35-second preview for the video two days prior.
- Official music video for "Dollhouse" by Melanie Martinez.
- The second single from Eminem's seventh studio album, Recovery. The music video features Rihanna, Megan Fox and Dominic Monaghan.
- Music video for "Lemon Incest" Serge Gainsbourg and Charlotte Gainsbourg.
- Toni Braxton performs in the music video "Un-Break My Heart" from the album "Secrets" recorded for LaFace Records. Toni Braxton sings while reminiscing about a boyfriend who was injured after a motorcycle crash. She thinks of the good times including swimming, playing Twister, and giving him a shave. At the end, she sings before an orchestra at a live concert.
- Official music video for "Stranger in Moscow" by Michael Jackson.
- Natalie Imbruglia performs in the music video "Torn" from the album "Left of the Middle" recorded for RCA Records. The video features a locked-off shot of an apartment room as Natalie Imbruglia sings with her boyfriend. A director and set crew constantly interrupt the action to re-position the two.
- Music video for the song "Wake Me Up When September Ends" by American rock band Green Day, as the fourth single from the group's seventh studio album, American Idiot (2004).
- Circle of the fire and the other side of the love and hate
- Official music video for "Happier" by Marshmello ft. Bastille.
- Music video for Lady Gaga's new single "G.U.Y".
- A contemporary dance performed by Maddie Ziegler to Chandelier by Sia.
- The music video for Rodrigo's second single from her sophomore album "GUTS". The song "bad idea right?" was released on August 11th, 2023.
- Martina's poignant odyssey through fractured memories unearths wounds from former lovers, embodying abuse, deception, and death, in her quest for self-acceptance.
- Music video for Wheatus's song, 'Teenage Dirtbag'.
- Cyndi Lauper performs in the music video "Time After Time" from the album "She's So Unusual" recorded for Epic Records. Cyndi Lauper plays a young woman who is forced to leave her boyfriend when she becomes homesick and worried about her sick mother.
- In the music video for "Don't Cry", GNR front man Axl Rose has a tempestuous relationship with his girlfriend, including a scene in which she takes a gun away from him. She is jealous, and he is self-destructive, a volatile combination.
- A woman starts dating a man who betrays her. After that she turns his life into a living hell.
- A parallel journey of a relationship and a heartbreak of two women, which ultimately brings them together.
- A homosexual teenage boy struggles with his identity.
- A promotional video for Johnny Cash's 2003 single "Hurt."
- A serial killer played by Jake Gyllenhaal travels through the hippest parties on a killing spree of Dalston hipsters. Gyllenhaal masters the role of unsuspecting dark-eyed psycho as he pumps iron and gums drugs preparing for his next beautifully fashionable victim. Transforming the music video into magnificently dramatic cinema, director Daniel Wolfe has captured contemporary London in a shockingly addictive modern Slasher.
- Slipknot's first song of their 5th album, The Gray Chapter.
- The story of a young adult with an aggressive nature. It follows the climax of relationships with his girlfriend and his mother.
- Pat Benatar plays a woman who runs away from her family to become a dancer in a club. However, when she finds out the owner of the club is more than what he seems, she convinces the other dancers to rise up against him with her.
- A short music-film from enticing creative artist Bella Thorne who created a fun feminist anthem and a sexy fantasy taunt to demanding and controlling partners.
- Max Fleischer-style animated video from the album "These Systems Are Failing" which questions the impact of technology on modern society.
- Two gangs. One ruled the streets by day. The other by night. It was only a matter of time before their paths crossed.
- Music video for Sam Smith's song "I Know I'm Not The Only One".
- The video follows the domestic and social problems faced during a day in the life of an unpopular outcast young female student
- A beautiful young woman obsessed with death goes joyriding on a desert highway. As she wreaks havoc trying to ram both cars and people, she lip-syncs to the title song which plays on her car radio. The video has five different versions.
- The song's music video has contributed to its widespread popularity. The clip, directed by Brendan Canty and Conal Thomson of small production company Feel Good Lost, follows the relationship between two men and the subsequent violent homophobic backlash. Upon its YouTube release in September 2013, the video quickly began to go viral, leading to Hozier's subsequent license with Columbia Records US and Island Records UK.
- Official music video for "Ghost" by Justin Bieber.
- The official music video for "Lonely" by Justin Bieber and Benny Blanco.
- Oficial music video was shot and released later in 1984. The narrative video features band member Jimmy Somerville as the boy who has experienced the issues described in the lyrics. Seen on a train, he is contemplating his childhood through flashbacks and the events that have caused him to leave his parents' home. At a swimming pool, his friends dare him to approach a young man that he is attracted to, for which he is later attacked in an alley by a homophobic gang led by the man he had approached at the swimming pool. A police officer brings him back to his home. It is implied that the boy's parents learn of his homosexuality for the first time through this incident and are shocked, but only the father seems unsupportive. The boy then catches a train to London, on which he is reunited with his friends.
- 20054mNot Rated6.6 (117)Music VideoThe music video for "Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father)" was directed by Lindsay Lohan in Chelsea, Manhattan, New York City, and references her father Michael's alcoholism and alleged domestic abuse. In the video, Lohan hides in the bathroom and prays a rosary as her parents, Michael and Dina (played by Drake Andrew and Victoria Hay, respectively), argue and fight in the living room.