Jonathon Glazer is an English director known for his commercials, music videos, and films. After studying theatre design, he began directing commercials and trailers. His films include Sexy Beast (2000), Birth (2004), and Under the Skin (2012). Glazer is renowned for his unique style in music videos, using techniques like slow motion, long takes, and surreal mise-en-scene to set moods and tell stories in a cinematic way. He has directed over a dozen music videos for artists like Blur and Radiohead. Glazer's distinctive style in both commercials and music videos helped lead to his success as a film director.
2. WHO HE IS
Jonathon Glazer is 47
years old and was born
March 1965.
He is an English Director
of Commercials
and Music
Videos, sometimes
of Films.
3. BIOGRAPHY
After studying Theatre Design at Nottingham
Trent University, Glazer started out directing
theatre and making film and television
trailers, including award-winning work for
the BBC.
4. FILMOGRAPHY
Sexy Beast (2000)
Birth (2004)
Under the Skin
(2012, forthcoming)
He directed three short films
of his own: "Mad" "Pool" and
"Commission"
6. MUSIC VIDEOS
To date, Glazer has been recognized for having shot 12
Music Videos. Having worked with the likes of Blur,
Radiohead and Jamiroqui, what is typical of glazer is his
choice of camerawork, use of mise-en-scene and editing.
7. CAMERA WORK
Glazer tends to use a lot of close up shots and
mid shots to fully portray the tone of the piece. In
‘Rabbits in the headlights’ his use of these shots
illustrates the vulnerability of the lead role which
goes against male objectification conventions.
What is typical of Glazer is his cinematic- look
to his videos. This has allowed him to fully
captivate the tones of the piece, setting it apart
from usual music videos.
8. MISE-EN-SCENE
By taking everyday environments, Glazer tends to manipulate them
with negative or darker connotations and create surrealism.
- For example if we look at Blur’s ‘The Universal’, Glazer
uses clinical lighting and costume to create an out-of-place feel
to the bar that the band are featured playing in.The
performance shots are interchanged with scenes of a crowd
of ordinary people standing motionless before an oddly
shaped speaker. The evident minimalist take on the video
throughout provides an ‘eerie’ and ‘unsure’ feel for the
audience.
9. EDITING
Slow motion and long shots are used combined with special effects
to create the enigmatic and disturbed feel to the videos.
- In the case of Radiohead’s ‘street spirit’ uses an overlap of shots in black and white to
illustrate the feel of the piece.
In Blur’s video, Glazer uses a
picture of a magnet as a
symbolic reference to convey
love/lust. This was added in
post-production.
10. SUCCESSES
Since the mid-1990s he has directed a number of music
videos, and was named MTV Director of the Year 1997.
BAFTA Nominations:
- Best British Film
- Best Director of a British Independent Film.
- Satellite Award for Best Director
- Independent Spirit Award for Best Foreign Film
11. STYLE
Glazer’s style has been regarded as unique. He sets himself apart with a
surreal style that employs lots of long takes, unlike modern cut-a-second
videos. he has also been known to hire actors for videos which may explain
why some of his music videos are more like Mini-Movies. This can explain
how he later made a transition to film so fluently. His video tend to be slow-
paced but with complex narratives and disturbing themes, which altogether
challenges the audience.
12. COMMENTS
Glazer’s style of directing is unique and is evidently a contributing factor
for his success. He appears to experiment with his videos in an effort to spark
controversy, but to equally shed light on what can be done, without hesitating
to step out of video conventions. Glazer does make an attempt across his
work to include the features identified in Andrew Goodwin’s theory, which
suggests that usual conventions are still permitted within Music Videos in
order for an audience to interpret them correctly.