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The music video intercuts black and white footage of the band performing the song with the story of a man who bumps into a mysterious stranger and starts to disappear. He is played by English actor Paddy Considine. [25] "Speed of Sound" 2005 Mark Romanek: Coldplay perform the song in a sound stage behind large LED displays. The lights were ...
In October 2012, the music video for Coldplay's song "Hurts Like Heaven" was released. The video was based on the story of Mylo Xyloto, a boy who grew up in tyranny ran by Major Minus. The fictional comics titled Mylo Xyloto continued on the story portrayed in the music video when the series was released in early 2013.
The official video is dedicated to American actor Dick Van Dyke, who handled production alongside his wife Arlene Silver. [13] Its director's cut, led by Spike Jonze and Mary Wigmore, came out on 6 December. [14] Coldplay published a shorter version directed by Crisp on 13 December, celebrating Van Dyke's 99th birthday. [15]
Coldplay began filming the music video on 24 November. The video appears to be one continuous shot, and while it might have been filmed with a single camera, the amount of takes in the video is unknown. Whether this means the finished product is a mix of many clips seamlessly stitched together is unknown. [11]
The official music video was directed by the band's long-time collaborator, Mat Whitecross. It was released on 29 November 2015. The concept for the video was hatched after Coldplay frontman Chris Martin and British motion capture expert/actor Andy Serkis met on a plane and discussed ideas. It took about six months to make the music video ...
Coldplay were credited with ushering into a new era of sustainable touring with the endeavour, [12] becoming "pioneers" for the future of live entertainment. [24] The first 175 shows have made over $1.14 billion from 10.3 million tickets sold, making it the most-attended tour of all time and the first by a group to surpass $1 billion. [ 25 ]
Coldplay: A Head Full of Dreams is a music documentary directed by Mat Whitecross about British band Coldplay, documenting their beginnings and rise to fame.The film received a single-day release on 14 November 2018 in select cinemas globally and was made available to stream on Amazon Video two days later.
The video starts off with an animated diagram of the water cycle, then portrays the band as two-dimensional paper cutouts doing household chores, when suddenly disaster strikes the earth in the forms of floods, volcanoes and electric shocks. Like the music video for "Shiver", "Don't Panic" also features the yellow globe on the cover of Parachutes.