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Fanvid

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"I like editing anime clips to music andβ€”and reading fantasy books with convoluted backstories."

Also known as AMVs or Anime/Animated/Amateur Music Videos, In Japan they also use MAD for Musical Anime Doujinshi. Other media have their own acronyms, though AMV is sometimes used as a blanket term as well. The most common are DMVs for doujinshi, GMVs for video games, CMVs (also used for cosplay music videos) for western animated series and comics (if they're not using AMV), Animash and Non/Disney for western animated films or mixed animated media, PMVs for My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, YTPMVs for popular YouTube Poop sources (these emphasize the Voice Clip Song traits of AMVs), and MMVs for manga. There is even a Not Safe for Work variant named HMV, which uses Hentai scenes.

In a nutshell, a basic concept is to take recorded footage from your favorite movies or TV shows, set all these edited scenes to your favorite music (maybe add some Fan Art or subtitling) put it all together in a video editor on your PC, then upload it to any video sharing site online and wait for awesome comments to pour in! YouTube is a popular choice.

It's not the most productive activity in the world, but for the most dedicated, it is one of the most time-consuming. Like Fan Fics and Fan Art, making and watching these videos is another way these fans express their consuming obsession over their favourite show.

Naturally, the companies and network executives behind these TV shows and music are mixed on the whole deal. Some companies welcome the support and publicity and even hold competitions for the best video. Others simply turn a blind eye to these videos, neither encouraging them nor forcing them removed under threat of lawsuit. Other companies do the latter.

Romance-based videos, retellings of canon plotlines, and videos centered around specific characters (often called "tributes") are some of the more prevalent genres. However, countless genres exist, ranging from Gag Dub parodies to crossovers featuring entirely new plotlines and abstract videos which run their source material through every visual effect known to man.

Subcategory of Fan Works. Just like with Fan Fic, Sturgeon's Law applies oh so very much when it comes to the overall quality of the following videos, especially given the young ages and resulting inexperience of some of the creators. See also Fan Film, Fan Animation, and Multi-Animator Project.

A Sister Trope is The Abridged Series. Super-Trope to Simpsonwave.


    open/close all folders 
    Fanvids with Their Own Pages 

Trends

    Popular Combinations 
Action

Characterizations

General

Genres

  • Any show dealing in anyway with supernatural beings and romance combined with Real Life's "Send Me An Angel". (Ah! My Goddess is the most common. Often entitled: "Send Me BelldandyπŸ‘ Image
    "). There is a Chrono Crusade version β€” the irony that Chrono is a devil, not an angel.
  • "Weird Al" Yankovic and Lemon Demon seem the go-to artists for high energy, wacky comedy vids. (Some AMV contests have actually banned the use of Weird Al music since it renders making a crowd-pleasing, overwhelmingly popular comedy video far too easy.) Case in point Lupin III/"This Is The Life"πŸ‘ Image
    , which even Weird Al has said is better than his own video for the song, which was basically him acting out the lyrics mixed with scenes from the movie it came from Johnny Dangerously. Then there are theseπŸ‘ Image
    twoπŸ‘ Image
    mashups of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic with two of his polka medleys, one with "Polkarama" and the other with"The Angry White Boy Polka". They impressed Al so much that he posted the links of both of them on his Twitter page... which indirectly led to him being offered a guest role on the show.
  • As a rule, any Hot-Blooded show goes well with JAM Project.
  • If you have a depressing series, one that takes place in a Crapsack World, or one where everyone is messed up expect the Gary Jules cover of Tears for Fears' "Mad World" used at least once in a video.
  • On default shonen series tend to have a lot of Skillet, Within Temptation, Breaking Benjamin, Linkin Park, Three Days Grace, and Red videos.
  • Have a Tear Jerker or Utsuge series with lots of death, mortal stakes at hand or major deaths? The acoustic version of "Life is Beautiful" by Sixx A.M., and for older amvs "Meant To Live" by Switchfoot, is relatively common.
  • Animal related series and movies and symphonic metal are often paired together. Within Temptation probably gets used the most.
  • "Remember The Name" by Fort Minor is one of the few rap songs commonly used for action shonen series.
  • Florence + the Machine is popular for dramatic series.
  • "Chu Chu Lovely" by Maximum The Hormone is frequently used for comedy videos. Often times the maker doesn't realize the actual meaning to the song.
  • "Legends Never Die" by Against The Current gets used for a lot of sports anime videos.
  • High-speed recaps of the events of long and complicated works, or series of works, to Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire". Especially where you can draw a parallel between a person or event mentioned in the song and a character or event in the work.

Sex

Shipping

    Fandom Specific 
Anime and Manga
  • Naruto:
    • Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" by Daft Punk with Naruto.
    • Crossfade songs, especially "So Cold", set to Naruto scenes.
    • Three Days Grace songs are commonly used. "Animal I Have Become" is the most popular.
    • Cascada songs for romance videos.
  • Not quite as common anymore, but during Dragon Ball Z's heyday, there were innumerable pairings of that series with tracks by DMX.
  • One Piece and any song to do with pirates or sailing, Professional PirateπŸ‘ Image
    is a popular one. Too bad no-one's done a good one yet..
  • There is a notable amount of AMVs for Elfen Lied set to music by Evanescence.
  • Sailor Moon:
    • Inexplicably, "Raver's Fantasy" by Tune Up.
    • The Real Sugar Baby" by Stephanie Beard for Chibi Usa, because Beard voiced her.
    • Sailor Uranus and Sailor Neptune videos using any variety of t.A.T.u. songs.
    • Christina Aguilera's "Fighter" has become increasingly popular for Sailor Moon.
  • Literally half of all RahXephon AMVs use Mindless Self Indulgence, to the point where you have to admit that there are some strong thematic similarities between the two. This was likely inspired by the original creator of the famous "Euphoria" AMVπŸ‘ Image
    using their song "Faggot" to lampoon his own work on AMV Hell 0.
  • There is an insane amount of Hetalia: Axis Powers Fan Vids featuring the song "Europa" by the band Globus. How many? OVER FIFTY different AMV's on YouTube. (And counting.)
  • Wolf's Rain:
    • AMVs tend to get set to a lot to Sonata Arctica's music, with probably the most popular songs being "The Cage" and "Ain't Your Fairytale," which fit the themes of Wolf's Rain quite well.
    • Within Temptation is popular, especially "The Howling".
  • More than a few people have connected CLANNAD with "Terrible Things" by Mayday Parade. The song is about a man talking to his son about how he fell in love with his wife, married her, and how she eventually died of terminal illness when the child was young.
  • "Oh Know You Didn't" from Mercenaries, "Molly" or "Boomin'" by Mindless Self Indulgence, with Gunslinger Girl.
  • Code Geass videos with "Viva La Vida" by Coldplay are abundant.
  • Soul Eater and the Marilyn Manson cover of "This Is Halloween" is a common occurrence.
  • As the anime is about classical music and Kaori uses a violin, Lindsey Stirling songs are frequent in Your Lie in April videos.

Comic Books

Film β€” Animation

Film β€” Live Action

Live-Action TV

Music

Tabletop Games

Video Games

Western Animation

    X with alternate music 
  • Grabbing a specific scene, mostly or totally unaltered and unedited, from a work of media, and adding it music from a foreign work, specifically inserted to better blend in, sometimes improving upon the original music placement. In this regard it differs entirely from your traditional AMVs.

Anime and Manga

Live-Action TV

  • In British Formula One fandom anytime the BBC doesn't have the TV rights the new opening titles will show up with "The Chain" by Fleetwood Mac replacing the music.

Video Games

Web Videos

    Funny re-cuts 
  • Re-cutting a show as its own Parody or Affectionate Parody occurs frequently.
  • Cut some good scenes, take them out of context and insert in a new one, mix them with awkward silences, gasping or groaning, stir and cook for some time... and viola, you get yourself a Fan Vid so slashy or dirty that the creators' faces would turn red had they chance to see it.
  • Crossover re-cuts are fairly popular. Creative fans use several sources with the same performer to find some humour or awkwardness. Alternatively, it's used to add a desired flavour. For instance, Brokeback Mountain music is very popular for Slashy videos or The Twilight Zone for some mystery.
  • Fine selections of the best snarks, coolest showdowns or most badass moments are well-liked among viewers.
  • Collecting every single utterance of a show's catchphrases or all occurrences of Running Gags in one Fan Vid is favourite sub-category.
  • Fandubs, video clips that have had all of the audio removed and replaced by spoken audio, either from another show or by the fan's own voice acting. These are usually humorous in nature, although some fandub projects crop up by fans who hated the original professional dub of a series (or noticed that there wasn't one) and want to give it a better one. As an aside to the copyright infringement issues, humorous fandubs are not considered infringement, at least under US law. Parody and satire are protected free speech under the First Amendment β€” the decisions in favor of MAD alone could fill a minor law library.
  • Snarky MST-like cut reviews with commentaries, either subtitled or dubbed, are popular and fairly more creative than just mixing the scenes with music.
  • It has become common to set clips from the Star Wars films to "You Spin Me Round (Like A Record)" by Dead or Alive, if only because spinning itself in Star Wars has become a meme.
    Other common techniques 

Examples:

    Multiple Mediums 
    Anime & Manga 
    Films β€” Animation 
    Films β€” Live-Action 
    Live-Action TV 
    Music 
    Tabletop Games 
    Video Games 
    Web Animation 
    Web Comics 
    Web Videos 
    Western Animation 
    Real Life 
  • Another early progenitor of the modern Fan Vid: Fighter Fling, created by none other than the F-14 Tomcat fighter squadrons of the United States Navy. That's right, even the hotshot Top Gun types were into this sort of thing! From 1989 to 2004 (when the Tomcat's retirement was announced), the squadrons would produce one long yearbook-like video of Tomcats and their crew acting badass or Bunny-Eared set to whatever music was popular at the time. Every so often, clips or entire Fighter Fling videos appear on YouTube, but as they are no less copyright violations than the average modern-day Fan Vid, they are often taken down due to DMCA.
    • The final Fighter Fling produced in 2004 included a sendup of Van Halen's "Right Now" music video, centered upon the final days of the F-14 Tomcat's service history.
    • This sequenceπŸ‘ Image
      from Fighter Fling 2004 says it all. You will never doubt the quirkiness of the United States military ever again.
  • Footage of Hitler's army being deployed seems to fit well with Krook's March from Donkey Kong Country 2 hereπŸ‘ Image
    , as it does with John Williams' Imperial March hereπŸ‘ Image
    .
  • You can find a lot of NATO fanvids - yes, really! - under the banner of "NATOWave". It's usually footage of NATO armed forces put to songs like "Death Squad" (Perturbator)πŸ‘ Image
    or (slowed + reverb) "Lay All Your Love On Me" (Abba)πŸ‘ Image
    .

Feedback

Video Example(s):

Happy Around The World

Pharrell brings up the multiple fanmade music videos from across the globe set to his hit single "Happy".

Alternative Title(s): Fan Videos, Anime Music Video, Fan Video

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Pharrell brings up the multiple fanmade music videos from across the globe set to his hit single "Happy".

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