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1-16 of 16
- Official music video for "Take on Me" by A-Ha.
- A music video for Michael Jackson's song 'Billie Jean'.
- A promotional music video for A-ha's 1985 song "The Sun Always Shine on TV".
- 2nd music video for the single "Major Tom (Coming Home)" by Peter Schilling. This is the English version of the song and it presents images of Schilling performing the song while NASA and outer space archive images are put together to fit with the song imagery.
- The video was directed by Steve Barron. The theme of the video is a robbery gone wrong. It is actually the second version of this video. The first version did not feature any of the scenes of Morten Harket singing alone. The video was filmed entirely with a specific technique of mobile cameras, and it was filmed in Big Timber, Montana.
- "Hunting High and Low" is a song by the Norwegian band A-ha. It was released as the final single from the band's debut album, Hunting High and Low, in 1986. The video was directed by Steve Barron, and once again utilizes animation techniques which show singer Morten Harket "morphing" into various animals (an eagle, a white shark, and a lion). In 1986, the British TV show Blue Peter featured a special documentary on the making of the "Hunting High and Low" video.
- Mel & Kim dance in the street and misbehave with a police officer.
- Def Leppard performs in the music video "Let's Get Rocked" from the album "Adrenalize" recorded for Mercury Records. The video features a computer animated boy in a white shirt, jean vest, and red hat. The boy walks through his neighborhood avoiding chores as the band plays on a sound-stage animated with computer graphics.
- The second version by Jim Blashfield, featured Gabriel and Bush's faces superimposed over film of a town and its people in disrepair.
- On January 30, 1987 A-ha filmed the "Manhattan Skyline" video in a London studio. The music video was directed by Steve Barron and was inspired by newsprint, featuring a connect-the-dots animation of the band, a crossword puzzle, a printing press, and articles from newspapers from around the world. The newspaper at the end is one of Norway's largest papers, Aftenposten.
- The Blow Monkeys performs in the music video "It Pays to Belong" from the album "Whoops. There Goes the Neighbourhood" recorded for RCA and Ariola Records. The music video begins with a fax machine printing out images of people. Dr. Robert uses an electric razor before he begins to sing. He motions to people standing in the room who dance and then change outfits.