Girls on Film
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"Girls on Film" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Single by Duran Duran | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
from the album Duran Duran | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Released | 13 July 1981 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Recorded | Red Bus Studios, London December 1980 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Writer(s) | Duran Duran | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Producer(s) | Colin Thurston | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Duran Duran singles chronology | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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"Girls on Film" is the third single by Duran Duran, released on 13 July 1981.
The single became Duran Duran's Top 10 breakthrough in the UK Singles Chart, peaking at Number 5 in July 1981. The band personally selected the song for release following the failure of its predecessor, "Careless Memories", which had been chosen by their record company, EMI. Its popularity provided a major boost to sales of the band's eponymous debut album, Duran Duran, which had been released a month earlier.
The song did not chart in the United States on its initial release, but it became popular and widely known after receiving heavy airplay on MTV when the Duran Duran album was re-issued in 1983. The song was used as the opening theme song for the anime series Speed Grapher.
Contents
About the song
"Girls on Film" was originally written by Andy Wickett, one of Duran Duran's previous singers before Simon Le Bon. The original demo of the song has a very peculiar sound that differs somewhat from the final album version recorded in 1981. However, Wickett's version of the chorus remained, with very little change having been made to that part of the song's composition. When Wickett left the band, Duran Duran bought the song from him for £600 and made him sign a waiver removing his rights to the song.
The song begins with a recording of the rapid whirring of a motor drive on a camera. Both manager Paul Berrow and photographer Andy Earl claim to have supplied the camera for the recording.
Over the years, "Girls on Film" has become a staple of the encores for Duran Duran's live performances and is often the final song of a concert, during which lead singer Simon Le Bon introduces the rest of the band.
The song, along with "Rio", was originally omitted from the 1984 live album Arena to make room for newer and less familiar album material from 1983's Seven and the Ragged Tiger. Both tracks were included as bonus material in the 2004 CD reissue of Arena.
Music video
The song fared well on the radio and the charts before the video was filmed, but the controversy that ensued helped to keep the band in the public eye and the song on the charts for many weeks.
The video was made with directing duo Godley & Creme at Shepperton Studios in July 1981. It was filmed just weeks before MTV was launched in the United States and before anyone knew what an impact the music channel would have on the industry. The band expected the "Girls on Film" video to be played in the newer nightclubs that had video screens, or on pay-TV channels like the Playboy Channel. The raunchy video created an uproar, and it was consequently banned by the BBC and heavily edited for its original run on MTV; the band unabashedly enjoyed and capitalised on the controversy.
A Video 45 for "Girls on Film" and "Hungry Like the Wolf" was released in the United States in March 1983. The VHS-format tape contains the MTV-friendly "day version" of "Girls on Film", while the Betamax format contains the uncensored "night version". The Video 45 won the Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video in 1984, the first year the Academy gave that award. The uncensored video was also included in the Duran Duran video album (1983) and the Greatest video collection (released on VHS in 1999, and on DVD in 2004). The edited version would later be used in the 2008 karaoke video game SingStar Pop Vol. 2.
Simon Le Bon commented in the audio interview on the Greatest DVD collection that the scandal of the music video overshadowed the song's message of fashion model exploitation.
Summary of the uncensored full-length music video
The band performs on an elevated stage behind a models' catwalk, which resembles a boxing ring, as various scantily clad women act out a series of erotic vignettes. A number of these scenarios feature mild depictions of BDSM, sexual fetishism and fantasy and recurring themes of seduction and abandonment:
- Two models in lacy black teddies mount the catwalk carrying pillows. They straddle a shaving cream-covered post at either end and move toward the centre, sliding their crotches along the horizontal candy-striped shaft in a slow and suggestive manner. The models proceed to have a pillow fight, which causes their breasts to become partially exposed. Upon finishing, they kiss and return to their dressing room and pour champagne on each other's cleavage.
- A petite female Sumo wrestler with her hair flared up in a tall tophawk ponytail mounts the catwalk to confront a lumbering, heavyset male Sumo wrestler. The woman is wearing a sheer top and a mawashi loincloth; the camera follows her as she enters, offering a generous, fetishistic view of her partially exposed buttocks. In the confrontational tachi-ai stance, she seizes her opponent by the shoulder and flips him forward head-over-heels. He somersaults and lands on his backside with a thud and she gives the ceremonial rei salutation (i.e., a bow) and walks away victorious.
- A masseuse in a white nurse's uniform with white garter suspenders and sheer white stockings administers a full-body hot-oil massage to a man (the sumo wrestler) on a steam-bath table. She later walks away leaving the man unconscious.
- A woman in a cowgirl costume rides on the back of a muscular, G-string-wearing, black male model who is fetishistically costumed as an equine. She later soaps his semi-nude body with a wet sponge and then leads him on a leash while he cavorts behind her.
- A model wearing a one-piece swimsuit and high-heels struts and poses on the catwalk before falling backwards into a child's inflatable plastic wading pool and collapsing. She is "rescued" and revived by a male lifeguard. She responds by embracing and kissing the lifeguard so intensely that he becomes unconscious from exhaustion and is left in the pool while she walks away. The model is later seen reclining on a chair, nude, drying herself with an electric blow dryer before rubbing ice cubes on her nipples in closeup.
- A brunette model removes her fur coat to reveal her breasts and skintight see-through plastic knickers underneath. She mud-wrestles with a blonde woman wearing a one-piece swimsuit. The blonde woman loses and is left behind in the mud, while the brunette woman is attended by a clothed male assistant who sprays the mud off her body with a water hose.
B-sides, bonus tracks and remixes
The b-side of the single was another song initially unavailable anywhere else, a synthesiser-heavy dance track called "Faster Than Light".
The extended night version of "Girls on Film", similar to "Planet Earth" wasn't a remix, but a completely new arrangement of the song. This was mainly due to technology constraints in 1981.
There are two slightly different mixes of the Night Version, one clocking in at 5:45, the other at 5:27. The video version clocks in at 6:19.
In 1998, EMI released Girls on Film – The Remixes, featuring a swathe of newly commissioned re-constructions of the song by notable remixers like Tall Paul and Tin Tin Out. A couple of these mixes were included on the 1998 UK release of the single "Electric Barbarella".
Covers, samples, & media references
Cover versions of "Girls on Film" have been recorded by Björn Again, Wesley Willis Fiasco, The Living End, Girls Aloud, Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers, Billy Preston, Kevin Max, La Ley, Midnight Oil and Nathan Stack[1]
Formats and track listing
7": EMI. / EMI 5206 United Kingdom
- "Girls on Film" – 3:29
- "Faster than Light" – 4:26
12": EMI. / 12 EMI 5206 United Kingdom
- "Girls on Film (Night Version)" – 5:31
- "Girls on Film" – 3:29
- "Faster than Light" – 4:26
12": EMI. / 062-20 07176 Greece
- "Girls on Film (Night Version)" – 5:45
- "Girls on Film (Instrumental)" – 5:41
- "Faster than Light" – 4:26
- The Greek 12" release of "Girls on Film" contains the "Extended Night Version" with camera intro and also contains the "Instrumental Version".
- These two extremely rare versions can't be found on any other vinyl release.
- This "Girls on Film" version is available on the 2010 remastered 2-CD set of Duran Duran's debut album and is labelled as "Extended Night Version".
CD: Part of "Singles Box Set 1981–1985" boxset
- "Girls on Film" – 3:27
- "Faster than Light" – 4:26
- "Girls on Film (Night Version)" – 5:31
CD: Part of Duran Duran 2010 Special Edition (CD2)
- "Girls on Film" (Extended Night Version) – 5:45
- "Girls on Film" (Night Mix) – 5:42
- Track 1 is the same version as the Greek 12" release (EMI / 062-20 0717 6).
- Released in 2010.
CD: The Remixes United States
- "Girls on Film" (Tin Tin Out Mix) – 6:55
- "Girls on Film" (Salt Tank Mix) – 6:29
- "Girls on Film" (16 Millimetre Mix) – 7:28
- "Girls on Film" (Tall Paul Mix 1) – 8:28
- "Girls on Film" (Night Version) – 5:31
- "Girls on Film" (8 Millimetre Mix) – 5:47
- Released in 1999
12": The Remixes United States
- "Girls on Film" (Tin Tin Out Mix) – 6:55
- "Girls on Film" (Salt Tank Mix) – 6:29
- "Girls on Film" (Tall Paul Mix 1) – 8:28
- "Girls on Film" (8 Millimetre Mix) – 5:47
- Released in 1999
Chart positions
Chart (1981) | Peak position |
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UK Singles Chart | 5 |
Australian Singles Chart | 11 |
Swedish Singles Chart | 15 |
Irish Singles Chart | 16 |
Chart (1999) | Peak position |
US Billboard Dance/Club Play Songs | 24 |
Other appearances
Apart from the single, "Girls on Film" has also appeared on:
EP's
- Nite Romantics (1981, Japan)
- Night Versions (1982, Australia) (1984, New Zealand)
- Carnival (1982, The Netherlands, Spain, Canada, United States, except from the Japanese release)
Mini-LP:
- DMM Mega Mixes (1983, Germany)
Albums:
- Duran Duran (1981)
- Decade (1989)
- Night Versions: The Essential Duran Duran (1998)
- Greatest (1998)
- Strange Behaviour (1999)
- Arena (2004 reissue)
- Singles Box Set 1981-1985 (2005)
- Live from London (Bonus CD with Deluxe Edition) (2005)
Singles:
- "Ordinary World" (1993)
- "Electric Barbarella" (1998)
Personnel
Duran Duran are:
- Simon Le Bon – vocals
- Nick Rhodes – keyboards
- John Taylor – bass guitar
- Roger Taylor – drums
- Andy Taylor – guitar
Also credited:
- Colin Thurston – producer and engineer
References
- Official site
- TM's Duran Duran Discography PDF (216 KB), page 6
External links
- Articles with dead external links from January 2014
- Use dmy dates from January 2014
- Use British English from January 2014
- Pages using YouTube with unknown parameters
- Pages with broken file links
- 1981 singles
- Duran Duran songs
- Girls Aloud songs
- Song recordings produced by Xenomania
- Music videos directed by Godley and Creme
- Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video
- Song recordings produced by Colin Thurston
- Anime songs
- 1980 songs