Lana Del Rey Fingertips -music Video Snippet-... ((free)) Now
Pitchfork noted that the Fingertips visualizer "looks like something you’d find on a forgotten camcorder from 1999." Fans have compared it to the home movies in The Blair Witch Project but "infused with a melancholic poetry." Lana herself said in an Apple Music interview: "I didn't want a video. I wanted you to see what I saw when I wrote it—dust, light through a curtain, my own shaky hands."
If the internet has a collective unconscious, it is currently painted in shades of vintage sepia, trembling with the sound of a single, whisper-cracked voice. For fans of Lana Del Rey, the past few weeks have been a masterclass in anticipation. The keyword burning through every forum, Twitter timeline, and Discord server is simple yet haunting: Lana Del Rey Fingertips -music Video Snippet-...
The footage is shot on 16mm film, predictably, but with a twist. Unlike the glossy glamour of Tropico or the neon haze of Ride , the palette here is aggressively desaturated. Think The White Ribbon meets Gummo . Greys, muted blues, and the sickly yellow of a motel bathroom light. Pitchfork noted that the Fingertips visualizer "looks like
To understand the fascination with the one must first untangle the complex web of her unreleased discography. The confusion begins with the title. The keyword burning through every forum, Twitter timeline,
The circulating (originally rumored to be a Vevo exclusive or a director's cut leak) clocks in at approximately 17 seconds. But in those 17 seconds, a universe collapses.
Is the visually revolutionary? In terms of CGI or choreography, no. It is static. It is uncomfortable. It lasts less than 20 seconds.
Here is everything we know about the leaked/teased snippet, the visceral power of the song "Fingertips," and why this visual (even in fragment form) might represent the most vulnerable Lana Del Rey we have ever seen.