arctic_monkeys_body_paint_official_video

: It was shot primarily on 16mm Ektachrome film , a discontinued Kodak stock that provides an intensely nostalgic, high-contrast look.

: Much of the video features a Steenbeck editing table , showing the "Body Paint" video itself being edited, which Brook Linder describes as visualizing the process where "symbolic imagery is created (and where that process can fall apart)". arctic_monkeys_body_paint_official_video

The video is heavily inspired by and the "paranoid thrillers" of the era, specifically the work of cinematographer Gordon Willis and director Alan J. Pakula's The Parallax View . : It was shot primarily on 16mm Ektachrome

While some viewers see the lyrics as a story of infidelity—identifying "body paint" as a physical giveaway of a secret affair—many fans and critics view it as a meta-commentary on . Pakula's The Parallax View

: A standout sequence features a large-scale, revolving zoetrope , an idea that reportedly came to the director in a dream .

Arctic_monkeys_body_paint_official_video -

: It was shot primarily on 16mm Ektachrome film , a discontinued Kodak stock that provides an intensely nostalgic, high-contrast look.

: Much of the video features a Steenbeck editing table , showing the "Body Paint" video itself being edited, which Brook Linder describes as visualizing the process where "symbolic imagery is created (and where that process can fall apart)".

The video is heavily inspired by and the "paranoid thrillers" of the era, specifically the work of cinematographer Gordon Willis and director Alan J. Pakula's The Parallax View .

While some viewers see the lyrics as a story of infidelity—identifying "body paint" as a physical giveaway of a secret affair—many fans and critics view it as a meta-commentary on .

: A standout sequence features a large-scale, revolving zoetrope , an idea that reportedly came to the director in a dream .