Ketosex Music Video Com Now
The video is drenched in a pale, clinical blue-green filter—think MRI scans meeting neon underpasses. Director [Name] employs heavy use of slow-motion distortion: bodies entwined, then pixelating into digital static; lips syncing lyrics that feel delayed by half a second, as if the connection itself is buffering. The editing mimics the stop-start fragmentation of its namesake—glitch transitions, reverse-rewind loops, and sudden cuts to empty rooms or flickering cathode-ray TVs.
At first glance, the title “Ketosex” promises a collision of the dissociative and the intimate—a chemical haze melted into carnal rhythm. Com’s new music video delivers that friction, but not without leaving a few uncomfortable questions lingering in the afterglow. Ketosex Music Video Com
Here’s a sample review for a music video titled by an artist named Com (or featuring Com). Since I don’t have direct access to the actual video, this review is written as a general template/critique based on common stylistic elements in avant-garde, electronic, or underground music videos. You can adjust specifics (director, year, platform) as needed. Review: “Ketosex” – Com (Official Music Video) The video is drenched in a pale, clinical
★★★½ (3.5/5) Watch with good headphones and an open, if skeptical, mind. At first glance, the title “Ketosex” promises a
That said, when it works, it works . The final 45 seconds—a reverse playback of the entire video condensed into a shimmering blur, ending on a single frame of Com smiling—is genuinely affecting. It suggests that beneath the dissociation, there’s still a person reaching for connection.
For all its ambition, “Ketosex” risks drowning in its own concept. The middle third meanders into repetitive fractal imagery that feels more like a screensaver than a statement. Additionally, the video’s reliance on shock-adjacent aesthetics (needle drops, dental-camera close-ups of eyes, a brief flash of spilled milk) occasionally feels derivative of late-’90s industrial music videos without pushing the genre forward.
“Ketosex” is a bold, if occasionally self-indulgent, sensory experiment. It won’t convert anyone who dislikes abstract electronic music, but for fans of Arca, FKA twigs, or Oneohtrix Point Never’s visual work, this is a fascinating, queasy trip worth taking.
