The self-proclaimed "genre-queer” band, Sons of an Illustrious Father release their salacious cover of the Pussycat Doll's 2005 hit, Don't Cha, directed by Rafe Scobey-Thal and choreographed by Bobbie Jene Smith. As the band commented on their release in an interview, this song takes a "destructive, dated, distinctly heterosexual male perspective on women and discourses of desire" and transformed it into a "celebration of queerness".

Undead dark riders invade a wild west saloon, blasting away everyone in sight - now only a bad-ass N...

Four talented alien musicians are kidnapped by a record producer who disguises them as humans. Shep,...

Corrupt Colour follows childhood friends and self-proclaimed internet pop-stars, Emily and Gia as th...

A Long Island punk band meets a mysterious director through social media who generously offers to sh...

The McCartney Years is a three-DVD set featuring music videos, live performances and other rare foot...

All 10 music videos from Butterfly 3000 stitched seamlessly together and compiled on high-definition...

Bonus DVD for the 3 Doors Down album "Away from the Sun", featuring music videos, live performances ...

Crazy Nights is a music VHS by American hard rock band Kiss. The VHS features three videos from the ...

A child is watching a music video on his television screen.

A teenager is resurrected as a plant-headed zombie, searching to find his past happiness and humanit...

Career-spanning retrospective of Siouxsie & The Banshees' video output

A young girl, after looking through a fashion magazine, decides to go to Paris. For that, she'll nee...

Part concert film, music video collection, and propaganda piece, The Men Who Make the Music was DEVO...

The Immaculate Collection is the first commercially released greatest videos compilation by singer M...

Urias' first concert film, promoting her second studio album, HER MIND. Filmed at Audio, in São Paul...