Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Music
  4. Virtual Reality
  5. News

You can now re-create the 'Take On Me' video in your living room thanks to ARKit

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apple only released its ARKit suite of augmented reality development tools a matter of weeks ago, but it already fostered the creation of some rather impressive projects. Now, one developer has used ARKit to create a time warp back to the 1980s, powered by nostalgia and Norwegian pop music.

In the classic music video for Take On Me by A-ha, a young woman sat in a coffee shop is invited into her comic book by a mysterious hand-drawn suitor. Eventually, he manages to break free from his illustrated form and become a real human being, much like a pen-and-paper Pinocchio.

Recommended Videos

The clip has been parodied by all manner of different sources — the rotoscoping effect used to integrate the hand-drawn character into real-world surroundings immediately calls to mind the music video. Now, it’s possible to recreate Take On Mee in the comfort of your own home thanks to an inventive AR app.

We have already seen several AR projects, some built with ARKit, that place a “portal” to another a real-world environment. Looking at the scene through your phone’s screen, there is another world waiting on the other side of the portal, which you can often walk through to find yourself completely surrounded by virtual scenery.

Chip Sineni of Trixi Studios puts a different spin on this idea in his new AR experience inspired by Take On Me. Beyond the portal, your real-world surroundings are depicted in the same manner as the rotoscoped sets of the music video — oh, and there is also a 3D model of an 80s-looking guy dancing away to his heart’s content.

Sineni used ARKit to develop the app, according to Road to VR. The fact that creative people are already using the platform to create attention-grabbing projects like this one demonstrates exactly why Apple launched the tools when it did.

It’s rumored that Apple will introduce enhanced AR hardware capabilities with its upcoming iPhone refresh. Once people have that technology in their hands, they are going to want to see what it can do — and a fun, fresh experience like re-enacting a classic music video in their living room is a perfect primer.

Brad Jones
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
ChatGPT’s hiking advice left two hikers stranded on a mountain in Poland
The chatbot directed the pair onto a climbing route neither had the skills to finish, and it's not the first time AI has sent travelers somewhere they shouldn't have gone.
Bag, Clothing, Coat

A shortcut recommended by ChatGPT left two hikers stuck on a mountain face in Poland this month, and they needed a helicopter to get back down. It's the latest case of an AI chatbot steering travelers toward routes it has no real way to evaluate.

ChatGPT's shortcut led straight to a dead end

Read more
Firefox is doubling its update pace, and that’s good news for your security
Mozilla Firefox

Mozilla is about to speed up one of the most important parts of using Firefox: security updates. If you're used to seeing a new Firefox update land about once a month, that's about to change. Beginning in September, Mozilla plans to switch to a two-week release schedule for Firefox on desktop and Android, meaning users should start getting updates twice as often. That might sound like more frequent downloads, but it's really about closing security gaps sooner.

Why waiting a month for security fixes no longer cuts it

Read more
Anthropic confirms Claude acts differently depending on your language and which model you pick
A new study shows Claude's isn't nearly as consistent as you might assume.
Claude app on iPhone

If you've ever felt like Claude gave you a completely different vibe on one day than another, you weren't imagining it. Anthropic just published research confirming that its chatbot's personality shifts depending on which model you pick and which language you type in, and the pattern is consistent enough that it's worth knowing before you ask your next question.

The model you pick decides how Claude responds

Read more