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11th November 2005 |
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News |
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'Dream Robots' Dancing To 'Hell Yes' |
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by James Montgomery |
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There's a
reason Beck has been so hush-hush about the video for his new single, "Hell
Yes." Actually, there are four reasons.
They're called QRIOs, so-called "dream robots" developed by Sony Japan as
high-tech playthings for children. The QRIO can carry on conversations,
adapt to a multitude of environments and — most importantly — mimic human
movements, including complex dance routines. Currently, there are only four
working QRIOs in the world. And all of them appear in the "Hell Yes" video.
"They're not due for three or four years, but we were able to get them for
the video thanks to the good people of Sony Japan," director Garth Jennings
laughed. "They have such an unbelievably fluid range of motions, so Beck and
I just had to work out an elaborately choreographed number for them. I think
it took the programmers in Japan about three weeks to program the routine
into each robot."
According to Jennings — who rose to fame as one half of British directorial
duo Hammer & Tongs and just this year helmed the big-screen adaptation of
Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy" — Beck had been
kicking around the idea of a video featuring the QRIOs for more than a year
now, but it took an impressive amount of wrangling to actually land the
robots, which is why he was tightlipped with MTV News when we asked him
about the clip back in September.
"They ended up bringing the robots to us, and we shot them in one afternoon
in Los Angeles," Jennings added. "Most of the people who have seen the video
come away thinking that there's no way the QRIOs are real. They think
they're like people in robot suits or something."
No doubt, the pint-sized 'bots — they stand a shade under 2 feet tall — are
the stars of the clip, performing a synchronized dance routine before what
appears to be a room full of reporters. Beck himself barely makes an
appearance in the video, floating as a ghostly hologram above the QRIOS. And
no, actress Christina Ricci, whose voice appears on the track, does not
appear in the video.
"I didn't even know that was her on the song until we finished shooting the
video!" Jennings said. "We had a lovely Japanese woman perform the lines
instead. And we already had these amazing robots in the video. I think
anything more would've been overkill."
This report is from
MTV News.
To watch the video visit Beck.com/media