A man enters a lift and gets transported to a beach, where he finds the band's members buried in the sand. Despite publishing the music video on their website, Coldplay never released it officially on YouTube.
The band perform the song in a studio. In July 2020, all music videos from Parachutes (2000) were remastered in celebration of its 20th anniversary.[11]
A slow motion sequence of Martin walking along the beach as he sings and the sunlight arrives. The music video was meant to include the other band members, but the funeral of Champion's mother was held on the same day.[13]
The original music video was directed by Sophie Muller and features Martin as a prisoner in a dark warehouse, while Buckland and Champion struggle to tie Berryman to a chair in a slow motion sequence.[15] It was replaced by Hope's version for being "too grisly" for American audiences.[16] His take combined an animated world with real-life footage of the band and earned a MTV Video Music Award for Best Art Direction.[5] In 2012, a fan published the European version on YouTube and received a license from Parlophone.[17]
A diagram of the water cycle is shown as a house with the band doing chores inside. The animation style used is vaguely similar to "Trouble", but without real-life footage.
The band perform the song in a large white room as Martin sings directly to the camera. The two women sitting on a step in the background are members of the crew. In August 2022, the music video was remastered along with "The Scientist" and "Clocks" to celebrate the 20th anniversary of A Rush of Blood to the Head (2002).[20]
The music video uses reverse motion, beginning with Martin lying on a mattress, continuing with him wandering through various locations and revealing he was involved in a car accident along with a woman played by Irish actress Elaine Cassidy. It won three MTV Video Music Awards.[22]
A stoic crowd watches the band perform the song with a laser show and other stage light effects. A link to the Make Trade Fair website can be seen on Martin's left hand.
The music video intercuts black and white footage of the band performing the song with the story of a man who bumps into a mysterious stranger and starts to disappear. He is played by English actor Paddy Considine.
Coldplay perform the song in a sound stage behind large LED displays. The lights were synthesised to showcase an animation made from Martin's vocal track.
Martin wanders the streets of London at night as the song's tempo picks up. He finishes the music video by performing with the band at Reebok Stadium, in Bolton.
In this black and white, science fiction-themed music video, the band are astronauts landing on an alien planet, where they re-activate a dormant robot. It tries to kill them and destroy their spaceship as the group attempts to fly away.
The music video uses footage from Attitudes (1985), which was then digitally enhanced to appear as though Coldplay were performing the song along with dancers Barbara Moseley and Gene Spencer. Their set was filmed in 1990.
The band climbs a hill and reach a quiet town to play the song with different instruments. They can also be seen dancing and walking around Mount Etna. Days later, an alternative version named Dancing Politicians, directed by Mat Whitecross, was released. It features numerous shots of political figures combined with scenes of war.
Coldplay perform the song in a blurry, warped version of the Liberty Leading the People (1830) painting. The band members crumble into rose petals as the song ends. An alternative music video directed by Anton Corbijn was released on the same day as a tribute to Depeche Mode's "Enjoy the Silence".[31] It portrays Martin as the king from the lyrics and ties the loose ends from "Violet Hill".[31]
The music video intercuts footage of the band playing in a courtyard and each member making light drawings. Their performance ends with a rain of butterfly-shaped confetti.
Both the original version and the Jay-Z remix have Coldplay performing on the Viva la Vida Tour as the music video, with the rapper appearing through a television in the latter.[34] A fan contest for "Lost?", the song's piano iteration, took place months later.[35] The winning (directed by Paul O'Brien) and runner-up (directed by Martin Buzora) entries gained tickets to see the band live at the O2 Arena.[36]
A group of children are waiting for a traditional Punch and Judy performance, however, the band appear as puppets "onstage" playing the song on an increasingly extravagant show. Harvey appears as one of the parents with a camera.
The music video consists of Martin lying on the floor as he interacts with stop motion animated chalk drawings. His character sees a woman being held hostage by a giant squirrel, which leads him to turn into a superhero and save her. It won three UK Music Video Awards.[39]
Whitecross edited the music video in a one-shot format. It begins with the band lying on the floor, until Martin gets up to play the piano and the others disappear. The set is later revealed to be a stage near River Thames and the rest of the group show up again, now accompanied by three Elvis impersonators: Tim Crompton, Harvey and Simon Pegg.[41]
The band play across various backdrops sprayed with colourful, stop motion animated graffiti, which were painted by Mylo Xyloto (2011) art director Paris.
A runaway elephant played by Martin escapes the zoo and embarks on a journey to find his friends in Cape Town. The music video was filmed in a nature documentary style and had a scrapped version directed by Shynola, who posted their take separately later.[43] Harvey and Crompton made an appearance as the zookeepers chasing the elephant.
A hooded young man played by Elliott Tittensor meets up with his girlfriend (played by Antonia Thomas) and they steal a car together, which is used for going to a colourful rave where the band are playing. Coldplay also released a live performance version co-directed by Mark Rowbotham before the official one was finished.[45]
The music video portrays Martin and Rihanna as lovers with a complicated story as they engage in a sword fight. It contains visual references to Chinese wuxia films.
An animated version of the Mylo Xyloto (2011) comics' first issue. The story is set on a futuristic dystopian world where sound and colour are completely forbidden.
The music video was mostly shot with thermal infrared imaging and negative imagery, incorporating various visual effects. It shows glimpses of a wandering wolf and sped-up cityscapes, the band can be seen in a forest as well.
Starring Chinese actress Zhang Ziyi, the music video is a tribute to silent films. She plays the stage magician Cecile, who performs in a traveling circus with her young assistant Christophe (played by Martin). As their work continues, he begins to notice the abusive relationship Cecile has with her husband Claude (also played by Martin), a famous, but alcoholic magician. Christophe then formulates an idea to relieve Cecile of her troubles as he learns levitation. The story happens in the present despite the early 20th century influences. A director's cut with a guest appearance from Peter Fonda was included on Ghost Stories Live 2014.[50]
Martin walks through King Street in Sydney dressed as a one-man band. He then reaches Berryman, Buckland and Champion, who are also dressed as one-man bands. They play the instrumental refrain of the song and he continues his walk alone, being followed by a crowd of fans (including Harvey dressed as a koala).[52] The music video ends with the band reuniting again and finishing the song with their fans as paper-made stars are blown into the square. An alternative scrapped version directed by Artisan was later posted separately, one shot from it can be seen on the official take when Martin passes by a television store.[53]
The music video portrays Martin as a janitor and Canadian actress Jessica Lucas as an aspiring ballerina, both using giant body suits. As they are not taken seriously as dancers or people, the pair face various humiliations on their daily life until meeting each other. Åkerlund commented his idea was "about just being different in the world, where life is a struggle and then you meet somebody who understands you and then it all falls into place".
An animated version of the Ghost Stories (2014) album cover. The music video displays the numerous illustrations present in the wings and was released as part of the bonus content for Ghost Stories Live 2014.[50]
The original music video was an animated interactive project in the style of Choose Your Own Adventure (1979) and told the story of a men traveling across the world in search of his lost lover.[58] It had 300 possible outcomes and a final version was published on Coldplay's YouTube channel based on the fans' most selected options.[59]
Black and white shots of the band performing the song fade into each other. The music video was released as part of the bonus content for Ghost Stories Live 2014.[50]
Filmed at the Imaginarium, the music video follows a group of chimpanzees that come across a Beats Pill and become inspired to form a band. Each one of them was designed to resemble the members of Coldplay.
The music video follows the band at the Salvation Mountain as they shoot photos that were later used for the promotion campaign of A Head Full of Dreams (2015).
Featuring surrealistic elements such as a popcorn-spouting volcano, racehorses galloping on water and a turtle floating down a subway platform, the music video alludes to various contemporary issues and received two silver prizes at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.[9]
Martin performs the song on a piano. A scrapped version directed by Joe Connor was made available separately in 2017.[65] It features an ice dancer (played by Tanja Kolbe) who is coping with loss as she dances with a partner who is no longer there.[65] A fansite published the take on YouTube and received a license from Parlophone as well.[66]
The music video intercuts footage of Coldplay's Tokyo Dome show, the Chainsmokers performing at a festival and a boy wearing a superhero costume as he plays with toys on his bedroom. It also uses a kaleidoscope effect.
Starting with a voice note from Martin, in which he is heard playing what would become the song's main riff, the music video shows how the track was developed from its earliest roots to the fully polished version that was released. It won a MTV Video Music Award for Best Rock Video.[69]
The music video combines live action puppetry, digitally painted sets and traditional animation to tell the story of a young girl lost at sea and sailing towards the unknown, symbolising the memories she has of her father. It won two silver prizes at the Clio Awards.[71]
Footage of the band performing the song on a beach is combined with scenes from around the globe in countries such as Ukraine, South Africa and Morocco. The music video is themed after the Xhosa word "ubuntu", which can be translated to "humanity".
The music video shows a couple played by Meshach Henry and Ida Saki dancing as they age from young lovers to old married partners while Coldplay perform the song.
Inspired by George Orwell's Animal Farm (1944), book the music video shows New York City plagued by crimes and homelessness under the regime of a pig dictator. Proceeds from the song were donated to the Innocence Project and the African Children's Feeding Scheme.
Landing on a post-apocalyptic planet, Martin explores its cities and meets a group of alien holograms. He dances with them as Berryman, Buckland and Champion appear playing the song and their combined energy allows him to fly into outer space. A visualizer of the band performing the track on a container depot, directed by Paul Dugdale, was released in anticipation for the official version.[77] Following the latter's debut, a choreography video was issued with the Ambiguous Dance Company.[78]
The music video depicts Coldplay, BTS and fictional alien band Supernova 7 performing the song together on different planets. The groups are then united as holograms through alien DJ Lafrique, who broadcasts the performance with her radio ship. They are being hunted by the Silencers from the Mylo Xyloto (2011) comics, suggesting its universe is connected with Music of the Spheres (2021).[80]
Martin and Gomez try to reach out for each other as a city pulls them apart until they finally manage to have a final hug. The black and white music video drew comparisons to Inception (2010), by Christopher Nolan.
The music video intercuts footage of the band playing the song at Climate Pledge Arena and animated scenes which were used as their stage backdrop during concerts.
After meeting each other at a local bar, a fictional puppet group named The Weirdos try to have a successful musical career while living in a humans-only world.
Coldplay perform the song at Foro Sol. The music video features time-lapsed images of Mexico City seen through an "alien camera" as well. Its interface and footage include the name of cities such as Barcelona, Cardiff, Zürich and Amsterdam written both regularly and in the fictional alien languages created for the track's parent album, leading fans to speculate those places would host Music of the Spheres World Tour shows.[85]
Natasha Ofili and the Coro de Manos Blancas join the band to play the song in sign language over a dark background, which changes to a concert at the Odeon of Herodes Atticus in Athens. Footage was rendered in black and white, being made available in Disability Pride Month.[87] An alternative one-shot version, directed by Ant Barrett, was later released for the Zerb remix.[88] It presents a helmeted man dancing through Helsinki with Martin.[89] Mor published his director's cut with coloured visuals separately as well.[90]
Three music videos were released: the Little Simz version is considered the original, mixing footage of the collaborators with artworks and lyrics; the Tini version sees them together at Grafton Street in Dublin, as directed by Ben Mor;[92] and the Elyanna version comes from their performance at Croke Park, directed by Ant Barrett.[93]
Ralph Macchio busks on the streets of Melbourne with a keyboard to get money for dinner. Rejected by onlookers, he changes his performance to tap dancing, consequently meeting a scalper that offers Coldplay tickets in exchange for a watch and a toy. During the show, Martin faces vocal issues and Macchio helps him to perform.
Dick Van Dyke dances and meditates on aging, family and love at his house in Malibu. The music video also includes footage from the actor's greatest works. A final cut directed by Nigel Crisp was released on his 99th birthday.[96]
Ghost Stories Live 2014: "Dutch DVD Music Top 30 – 29/11/2014". Dutch Charts NL (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Archived from the original on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
^"MTV Live Ponúkne od Júna Koncerty Hviezd" [MTV Live Will Offer Star Concerts from June]. SME Kultúra (in Slovak). 1 June 2005. Archived from the original on 20 February 2023. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
^"O Melhor do Dia" [The Best of the Day]. Folha de São Paulo Ilustrada (in Portuguese). 5 February 2010. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.