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Girls on Film

"Girls on Film"
Duran girls on film.jpg
Single by Duran Duran
from the album Duran Duran
B-side
  • "Faster than Light"
Released 13 July 1981
Format
Recorded Red Bus Studios, London December 1980 (1980-12)
Genre Synthpop
Length
  • 3:27 (Single Version)
  • 5:31 (Night Version)
  • 5:45 (Extended Night Version)
  • 5:41 (Instrumental Version)
Label
Writer(s) Simon Le Bon, John Taylor, Roger Taylor, Andy Taylor, James Bates
Producer(s) Colin Thurston
Duran Duran singles chronology
"Careless Memories"
(1981)
"Girls on Film"
(1981)
"My Own Way"
(1981)
Duran Duran track listing
"Girls on Film"
(1)
"Planet Earth"
(2)
Arena track listing
"Careless Memories"
(10)
"Girls on Film"
(11)
"Rio"
(12)
Greatest track listing
"Hungry Like the Wolf
(7)
"Girls on Film"
(8)
"Planet Earth"
(9)
Music video
"Girls on Film" on YouTube

"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 and the night version appeared on 2012 Square Enix video game Sleeping Dogs.

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.

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 exclusively at nightclubs that had video screens, or on 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.


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Wikipedia

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