Background and synopsis playing
Russian roulette in the music video for the song The music video for "Russian Roulette" was directed by Rihanna's frequent collaborator
Anthony Mandler, who directed Rihanna's previous videos for "
Take a Bow", "Disturbia", "
Rehab" and "
Wait Your Turn". It was filmed in two days on October 3–4, 2009 in
New York. In November 2009, Rihanna appeared on "
TV total" in
Germany to talk about her new album and preview 30 seconds of the video for the song. Mandler spoke to MTV News, stating "I think that with this song and the meaning of this song and how loaded it all is, no pun intended, how much imagery and perhaps symbolism that is loaded in this song, the only way to do it was to do something that was visually challenging". The music video for the song premiered on ABC's
20/20 on November 13, 2009. The music video opens with shots of Rihanna hooded, lying on the floor of a gas chamber. Three men, dressed in black uniforms and wearing dark round glasses circulate the singer, attempting to extort information from her. The scene then moves to a dimly lit room in which Rihanna sits at a table with her love interest (played by American actor
Jesse Williams) opposite. On the table between them lies a silver revolver in which, throughout the video, they take it turns holding to their heads. Other scenes include Rihanna in woodland at night standing in the middle of a highway before a car speeds towards her, quickly cutting to another scene, giving the impression she is run over. Elements of blood and tears and vehicular assault dominate the video.
Reception James Montgomery of
MTV reviewed the video stating:,"There's seemingly no bottom to the inky depths Rihanna plumbs in her brand-new 'Russian Roulette' video, a dark, claustrophobic descent that's creepier than anything she's ever done before (including the 'Disturbia' video)". According to Daniel Kreps from
Rolling Stone, there is a lot of imagery that is influenced by the altercation of Rihanna and Brown from February 2009, including a speeding car that approaches Rihanna while she stands alone at night – "a moment that seems to mirror the events immediately following the assault". Megan Masters from
E! Online commented that the video "portrays "some seemingly real emotion with her bouncing back-and-forth between writhing around a padded cell." Simon Vozick-Levinson from
Entertainment Weekly supported the dark imagery used in the video, explaining, "What, you thought Rihanna was going to give 'Russian Roulette' a video full of sunshine and rainbows and peppy choreography? Her first single from
Rated R is a song about violence". ==Live performances and cover==