Video — Consumed

2003 · Daft Punk, Leiji Matsumoto

Interstella 5555: The 5tory of the 5ecret 5tar 5ystem

Interstella 5555 represents one of the most ambitious music video projects ever produced—a 68-minute feature film with no dialogue, only Daft Punk's Discovery album as soundtrack. Directed by legendary anime creator Leiji Matsumoto (Space Battleship Yamato, Galaxy Express 999), the film merges French house music with classic anime aesthetics to create something genuinely unique in both mediums.

The narrative works as both straightforward sci-fi adventure and pointed commentary on the music industry's exploitation of artists. Four blue-skinned alien musicians are kidnapped mid-concert, their memories wiped, their skin changed, then repackaged as human pop stars by a sinister record executive harvesting their talent for his own immortality. It's heavy-handed but it works because Matsumoto's visual storytelling carries the emotional weight without any exposition.

What makes it compelling is how perfectly the music and animation sync—not just on obvious beat hits, but in mood, pacing, and narrative arc. "Digital Love" scores a bittersweet rescue attempt. "Harder Better Faster Stronger" accompanies the band's manipulation and transformation. The film trusts both Daft Punk's album structure and Matsumoto's visual language to tell a complete story, and that trust pays off. It's a cult object that sits at the intersection of electronic music, anime, and music video art, influential on everything from The Weeknd's videos to modern anime music integration.

animemusic videodaft punkelectronic musicsci-fileiji matsumotofrench housefeature filmvisual album
Interstella 5555: The 5tory of the 5ecret 5tar 5ystem — Matt Hoerl