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4 Mandeville Place, Marylebone
London, England, UK
51.5224° N · -0.1525° W
Get DirectionsRadiohead's music video for 'Just' (1995) was filmed on Mandeville Place in Marylebone, London, and remains one of the most discussed and debated music videos in rock history. Directed by Jamie Thraves, the video follows a man who lies down on the pavement outside a building and refuses to get up. As a crowd gathers and increasingly pressures him to explain why he's lying there, he eventually tells them — but the crucial dialogue is shown in subtitles that are deliberately cut off at the moment of revelation. The camera pulls back to show the entire crowd lying on the ground.
The mystery of what the man says has never been officially revealed. Thom Yorke and the band have consistently refused to disclose it, and Thraves has said the answer was deliberately designed to be unknowable. The video's concept — the idea that certain knowledge is so powerful or disturbing that it compels action (or inaction) — mirrors the paranoid, claustrophobic themes of The Bends (1995), the album from which 'Just' is taken. The video helped establish Radiohead's reputation for visually and conceptually ambitious filmmaking.
Mandeville Place is a quiet street in Marylebone, near the Wallace Collection. The specific building outside which the man lies down is visible in the video and identifiable to fans who have visited the location. The 'Just' video is frequently cited in discussions of music video as an art form and has been the subject of extensive online analysis and debate.
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