As I mentioned in my comment, there's a couple of things that prevent your approach from working.
Here's a quick example that deals with images, video and sound.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script>
"use strict";
function byId(e){return document.getElementById(e);}
window.addEventListener('load', onDocLoaded, false);
function onDocLoaded()
{
byId('mFileInput').addEventListener('change', onChosenFileChange, false);
}
function onChosenFileChange(evt)
{
var fileType = this.files[0].type;
if (fileType.indexOf('audio') != -1)
loadFileObject(this.files[0], onSoundLoaded);
else if (fileType.indexOf('image') != -1)
loadFileObject(this.files[0], onImageLoaded);
else if (fileType.indexOf('video') != -1)
loadFileObject(this.files[0], onVideoLoaded);
}
function loadFileObject(fileObj, loadedCallback)
{
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = loadedCallback;
reader.readAsDataURL( fileObj );
}
function onSoundLoaded(evt)
{
byId('sound').src = evt.target.result;
byId('sound').play();
}
function onImageLoaded(evt)
{
byId('image').src = evt.target.result;
}
function onVideoLoaded(evt)
{
byId('video').src = evt.target.result;
byId('video').play();
}
</script>
<style>
</style>
</head>
<body>
<input type="file" id="mFileInput"/>
<br>
<audio id="sound"></audio>
<img id='image'/>
<video id='video'/>
</body>
</html>
url = obj.files[0].name;
if you wish to get the name of the first file selected. To get around the security policy, you can (I imagine, it works with images) read the file in, turn it into a dataURL then set that as the src.