Body Horror/Music


 * Frequently Played for Laughs in the music of The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets, most notably in the appropriately-titled "Burrow Your Way to my Heart", "Hookworm" (Oh, God, "Hookworm"), and "The Innsmouth Look".
 * Michael Jackson's transformations into a werecat and zombie in his music video "Thriller". And his real life facial transformations even more!
 * And his robot transformation in Moonwalker.
 * There is no end to the mayhem in Michael Jackson's mini movie Ghosts. Michael (as "The Maestro") pulls a few funny faces and then pulls his face off as if it were a mask. Later on he pulls his entire skin off and does a song and dance number as a skeleton, and then he turns into a ghoul. He turns into water and possesses the mayor (by having the mayor drink him - um, Squick). Then his arm bursts out of the mayor's chest and causes the mayor to turn into a ghoul. He turns back to normal (for Michael) and crumbles into dust - then he appears as a giant ghoul face which scares the "Mayor" into leaping to his doom.
 * It just gets weird when his nose starts crumbling.
 * The Jackson 5's Torture. Early on, one of the brothers accidentally pushes his hand into a giant eyeball, getting his hand stuck in eye goo. He pulls it out, only to discover there's an eyeball in his palm.
 * A music video by Weird Al Yankovic titled "Fat" (a parody of "Bad") has Al becoming a fat man. It's much creepier than that description alone would indicate.
 * The full version of the "Rock DJ" music video by Robbie Williams, which involves Robbie stripping to get the attention of a female DJ. When he gets down to bare skin, he decides that isn't enough, so he begins to peel all of his flesh off, layer by layer, until he's left as an animated dancing skeleton. Naturally, this gets the DJ's attention.
 * The video for "Rubber Johnny" by Aphex Twin is this trope distilled to its' essence. It's all from a night vision camera viewpoint as these unseen characters watch as this freakish, vaguely human thing with bulbous eyes and a twitchy disposition slowly goes from content to a body spasmy berserk rage, interspersed with scenes of a dog that happens to share the same traits. And that's only the beginning -- I love it.
 * He IS snorting something.
 * Then there's the end of Radiohead's "There There" video...
 * Daft Punk gives us "Prime Time Of Your Live". A young woman in a world, judging by her photographs, inhabited by skeletons decides to become one. Using a razor.
 * The Slippermen from the Genesis song "The Colony Of Slippermen". They are Body Horror and High Octane Nightmare Fuel combined with a very literal version of Sex Changes Everything and a healthy dose of Freud Was Right.
 * The Music video for MGMT's Flash Delirum for those who havent seen it, it involves two guys coming back home, one has a bandage over a wound, halfway through the video he removes the bandage to reveal a singing slit in his throat, a guy reaches down into his throat and pulls out a long,disgusting fish, it's something you don't want to watch while eating.
 * Your Mileage May Vary but the end of Tom Petty's "On't Come Around Here No More" certainly qualifies. Being served and eaten like cake seems like something I'll stay away from. Biggest problem, other than the cannibalism itself, is that she's still very much awake and attempting to squirm even as the knife goes in....
 * The Talking Heads' "Seen and Not Seen" is one of the subtlest examples of body horror on this list, especially since it is delivered in a near monotone. It tells the story of a man who tries to mold his own face into the ideal he sees in the media using the force of his own will. He imagines that other people have the same ability, and mold their faces to suit their personalities. But then he comes to wondering if some people might have chosen their ideal poorly, and arrived at a face completely different from them, or could be stuck in transition between two faces, neither of which they want. The song ends with David Byrne intoning, "He wonders if he too might have made a similar mistake."
 * The concept of Lou Reed's video for "No Money Down" involves an Uncanny Valley edition of Reed