Take a closer look at the movie songs being produced in the last few years and you will notice a pattern. The visual rules of the game have changed. The centre of the frame is where the money lies.

Compositional nuances and peripheral set pieces have been discarded to the periphery. This dramatic shift is being influenced largely by the ubiquity of mobile devices. Notably, even in traditionally horizontal forms like movies, visual compositions are adjusted to fit the mobile experience.

The choreography in many film songs is now designed with the centre of the screen in mind, tailored to vertical viewing on platforms like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts. With phones being our primary mode of consumption, directors are aligning actors, dance sequences, and set elements towards the middle of the frame, ensuring that audiences catch the full impact of the scene even when viewed vertically. Consider the choreography of some of the most popular Farah Khan songs–think Main Hoon Na, Om Shanti Om , and Dil Se.

. , or that of iconic YRF musicals such as Mohabbatein or Dil Toh Pagal Hai . The richness of the frame ensured that whichever part of the frame your eyes gravitated to, you would encounter a novel finer detail that cohesively fits into the entire song’s essence.

And to shift attention organically towards the protagonists, directors would employ creative visuals techniques such as leading lines, rule of thirds, contrast, and composition. Compare that to the songs being .