Lady Gaga is back to her high-fashion, technicolor, confusing visual antics with her newest music video.
The so-called "short film" for her newest single, "911," premiered on Friday — and it recalls the surreal storylines of Gaga's past works, like "Telephone" and "Bad Romance."
Gaga wrote the song about her antipsychotic medication and, as described by Billboard's Nolan Feeney, "when your brain and your body feel at war with each other." That tension and duality is artfully reflected in the video.
"This short film is very personal to me, my experience with mental health and the way reality and dreams can interconnect to form heroes within us and all around us," she wrote on Instagram. "Something that was once my real life everyday is now a film, a true story that is now the past and not the present. It's the poetry of pain."
The five-minute video follows a hallucinatory experience after Gaga's character is nearly killed in a car accident — and upon additional viewings, many details emerge that hint at the video's twist ending.
We rounded up 30 such details that you may have missed.
A blue-haired Gaga is draped in red, orange, and pink fabric, which may be intended to resemble blood.
At the end of the video, Gaga is revived by a paramedic, who tells her she's been in an "accident."
A similar horseman is also seen in a video advertisement for LG, the famous electronics company. It's unclear whether it's simply product placement, or whether Gaga chose the company for sharing her initials.
As one Twitter user noted, the advertisement also bears the tagline, "Life's Good."
"As she lays on the floor battling for her life she looks up to see 'LG Life's Good' which is referencing to people who think her life is perfect just because she is Lady Gaga," the fan account wrote. "When she's in fact not perfect and she's struggling just like everyone else."
The park is located in the mountain-ringed Tularosa Basin and is dotted with white sand dunes, composed of gypsum crystals.
It's possible that Gaga filmed the video in New Mexico, although this is unconfirmed.
The blindfold could symbolize how Gaga's character is unconscious in real life.
It also bears an aesthetic similarity to the firemen on the scene at her accident.
In Greek mythology, the fruit represents temptation and death; Hades uses pomegranate seeds to trick Persephone, whose mother is the goddess of agriculture and earth, tethering her to the underworld.
Persephone becomes Hades' wife. She's forced to return to the underworld periodically, which causes winter.
Given the myth's themes of emotional trauma and manipulation, Gaga could be referencing her own real-life experiences with abuse and rape.
At the end of the video, Gaga's revived character is seen lying outside of a movie theater. The marquee reads, "Armenian Film Festival."
According to Ianyan magazine, the pomegranate is "the central fruit in Armenian culture" and "symbolizes fertility and abundance."
The music video also shows a movie poster for "The Colour of Pomegranates," a real-life 1969 Soviet art film written and directed by Sergei Parajanov, who was of Armenian descent.
"As much ritual as movie, 'The Color of Pomegranates' was staged amid ancient ruins, using religious relics as props," the New York Times wrote in 2018.
"Indeed, looting museums was one of the charges that the authorities leveled against Parajanov, a nonconformist who was persecuted and imprisoned on suspicions of homosexuality and became a cause célèbre among Western cinephiles."
When Gaga is revived at the end of the video, she says she can't feel her left leg.
In Gaga's hallucination, they float down from the sky using an umbrella. In real life, the medical personnel arrive in a helicopter.
Nearly every character in Gaga's hallucination in a real-life person who reappears later.
He kneels on the ground and beats the right side of his head against a red pillow. Again, the color red is likely meant to represent blood, or a wound.
Thermal blankets are often used to regulate a person's temperature after finishing extreme exercise (like running a marathon) or sustaining an injury.
In Gaga's hallucination, the woman carries something that resembles a selfie stick.
Although she seems stoic in the hallucination, her right cheek is adorned with fake teardrops.
"Dolls" are pills, as coined in Jacqueline Susann's 1966 novel "Valley of the Dolls." In the video, Gaga literally puts a small doll inside a bedazzled box.
As previously mentioned, Gaga has confirmed that "911" is about taking antipsychotic medication.
"It's because I can't always control things that my brain does. I know that. And I have to take medication to stop the process that occurs," she told Apple Music.
The paramedic holds Gaga with a rope tied around her injured ankle, which echoes a very similar scene in "The Colour of Pomegranates."
While Gaga floats, her face is illuminated by the sun's reflection in the mirror.
It's extremely easy to miss this shot, which occurs for less than one second at the 2:17 mark.
At the end of the video, when Gaga remarks that she can't feel her leg, the paramedic replies that her leg is going to be fine because of the tourniquet.
Throughout the video, Gaga seems to pay homage to emergency personnel who respond to accidents and disasters.
In her recent cover story for Billboard, she made a similar remark when defending the mandate to wear masks to limit the spread of COVID-19: "It's really wrong for us to go, 'I'm uncomfortable [with wearing a mask] because I can't breathe,'" she told the magazine. "Give me a break. Show some respect for the people who are there for us when we dial 911."
Gaga walks behind the horseman dressed in all-black, who now carries the yellow flag of New Mexico.
The red symbol in the center of the flag is the Zia sun symbol, regarded as sacred for the native peoples of the area. With its four rays, the symbol represents the four sacred obligations of the Zia culture: a strong body, clear mind, pure spirit, and a devotion to the welfare of others.
There's also a peacock sitting atop the roof, which historically symbolizes death and resurrection.
The lab coat bears the Rod of Asclepius, which is associated with healing and medicine in Greek Mythology.
It can be seen at the 2:46 mark.
Spine boards are used to stabilize victims on the site of an accident, while an automated external defibrillator (represented here by a wooden box) is used to deliver an electrical shock to a person's heart.
The men holding the shell to his mouth are dressed in yellow and red, like the real-life firefighters.
The same symbol dominates the "Chromatica" cover art.
In response, Gaga appears to say, "I didn't have my pills."
Gaga told Oprah back in January that she would "spiral very frequently" without her medication. This seems to suggest that she caused the accident in the video.
Note: This post was updated with information about the flag of New Mexico.
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