Instead of releasing a straight concert video, Duran Duran and director Russell Mulcahy chose to play with the origins of the band's name, and added a storyline and surreal elements that are interwoven with footage of the band performing on stage. The film's villain, the evil Dr. Durand Durand has crash landed on Earth and is surprised and confused to find teenagers chanting his name. When he discovers that they are not chanting for him, but for an upstart pop group, he sets up shop beneath the concert arena and attempts to wreak havoc on the band that stole his name. Of course, he and his henchmen fail at every turn and Duran Duran continue to perform, seemingly unaware of the evil doctor's plans. The video also included Russell Mulcahy's long-form video for "The Wild Boys". It was meant to be a teaser for a full-length feature film of the same name, based on the 1971 novel The Wild Boys: A Book of the Dead by William S. Burroughs. However, that film was never made. The expensive sets for the conceptual portions of Arena and "The Wild Boys" were built in the massive 007 Stage at Pinewood Studios. Some of the segments were also filmed at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham, where free tickets were given to fans. In addition to O'Shea, the American actressJennifer Connelly also appears in the video, walking across an empty stage in one segment. A picture book of the movie, Arena: The Book, was released in 1985. A live album, also called Arena, was released in late 1984. It featured the two singles "The Wild Boys" and "Save a Prayer ". The video for "Save a Prayer " is included as a DVD extra on the 2004 Arena DVD release. The DVD for Arena was released in April 2004 and includes as an extra The Making of Arenabehind the scenes documentary that was originally released as a separate videotape. A 2-in-1 DVD set with both Arena and Sing Blue Silver has also been released by EMI.
''As the Lights Go Down''
The Oakland, California concerts that were filmed for Arena were also edited to form the one-hour As the Lights Go Down concert video. As the Lights Go Down is essentially the Arena video with only the music, although the live footage for many songs was edited differently. This version was never released on any consumer video format and was only broadcast on television, first on Cinemax then later on MTV and other TV channels.