MusicNewsCara Delevingne wears suit of butterflies in her music videoThe visual for the model and actor’s first standalone track was directed by Luc BessonShareLink copied ✔️July 28, 2017MusicNewsTextAnna Cafolla Cara Delevingne has dropped an offbeat music video for her debut song “I Feel Everything”. The track features on the soundtrack for Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, and the visual was directed by filmmaker Luc Besson. Spliced with expansive, action-packed clips from the Cara-starring sci-fi film, the model, actor and author sings the slow, jazzy, Pharrell-produced track in a selection of questionable wigs. And then she dons a CGI bodysuit made of purple butterflies. Cool. “Your stare makes me freeze but I can't stay still,” she sings. “Those eyes keep me up longer than any other pill, and I know, being together, we feel like forever, and now, more than ever I feel everything.” Delevingne released a tune back in 2014 for a Chanel visual with Pharrell called “CC The World”, but “I Feel Everything” is her first standalone track. The song features on the cosmic film's soundtrack, which also includes tracks by Wyclef Jean, Bob Marley, David Bowie and more, with a score conducted and composed by Alexandre Desplat, who is also behind the music of The Imitation Game and The Danish Girl. While currently promoting the Besson flick, Cara will soon release her debut novel, Mirror Mirror. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe only tracks you need to hear from December 202511 alt Christmas anthems for the miserable and brokenhearted Lenovo & IntelInternet artist Osean is all for blending art and technologyLast Days: The opera exploring the myth of Kurt CobainHow hip-hop is shaping the fight for Taiwan’s futureNew York indie band Boyish: ‘Fuck the TERFs and fuck Elon Musk’The 5 best Travis Scott tracks... according to his mumTheodora answers the dA-Zed quizDHLSigrid’s guide to NorwayThe 30 best K-pop tracks of 2025‘UK Ug’: How Gen Z Brits reinvented rap in 2025 How a century-old Danish brand became pop culture’s favourite sound system