Girls On Film is the second single from the New Wave band, Duran Duran. One of their more popular songs, Girls On Film included a 'night version' remix and a video to accompany that remix. The video, however, caused quite some controversy as there were some sexually explicit moments in the video, including mud wrestling and whatnot. It was banned from BBC and MTV almost instantly, but it was popular in nightclubs that showed videos. To this day, "Girls On Film" remains one of Duran Duran's most famous songs.
Girls On Film: In 2000, while lying on the floor of the bedroom in my studio apartment, Kazhmir and I were flipping through a book which listed the greatest bands of all time in the history of the world ever.
Girls On Film: I don't know that they will ever be back in their original forms, but I think everything cycles back around, picks up new influences along the way, and morphs into something else.
Girls On Film: The Girls on Film street team is called the "Film Crew", and these are fans/friends which we have recruited at home and in other cities to help get the word out about the band's upcoming shows, releases, & other happenings.
Except in those fleeting moments when it was ridiculous and offensive—sending a girl out in a metal collar to which one might attach a leash seemed a bit much.
In an interview video available on Oxygen's Web site, she tells a story that builds to a teary climax: "I maced the entire dance floor." Somewhere in there, the show is offering therapy, giving the ladies a chance to face up to themselves, but its heart is in documenting girl-on-girl crime.
The situation of its heroine, Baby Houseman, an awkward girl initiated into the mysteries of self-expression one magic summer in the Catskills, spoke straight to the contestants' hearts.