Young & Rubicam, New York, conceived of this spot which thrusts us into a wind tunnel where a motorbiker/tech guy is putting a Ducati motorcycle through its aerodynamic paces only to be interrupted by a co-worker who wants him to translate a tech manual into Portuguese.
Agency: Young & Rubicam, New York Ian Reichenthal, Scott Vitrone, chief creative officers; Darren Moran, global creative director, Xerox; Kleber Menezes, associate creative director/art director; Corey Rakowsky, associate creative director/copywriter; James Maravetz, sr. copywriter; Lora Schulson, Nathy Aviram, directors of content production; Alex Gianni, executive producer, content production; Craig Sklaver, assistant producer. Production Company: O Positive Films Jim Jenkins, director; Ralph Laucella, exec producer/line producer; Frederick Elmes, DP. Editorial: MacKenzie Cutler Dave Koza, editor; Kristy Faris, assistant; Melissa Miller, producer. Visual Effects: The Mill New York Ben Smith, creative director; Ruben Vanderbroek, lead 3D animator; James Williams, 3D animator; Piotr Glabinski, 3D modeling; Mark French, Flame artist; Randy Krueger, Combustion artist; Jared Yeater, Cat Scott, VFX producers. Sound Design: MacKenzie Cutler Dave Koza, Sam Shaffer, sound designers.
Top Spot of the Week: Barnardos, BBH Dublin, Director David Leon Shed Light On Childhood With Birthday Candles
Childrenโs charity Barnardos is releasing this thought-provoking film created by BBH Dublin to highlight the challenges some children in Ireland face. Barnardos knows that to understand a childโs issues takes time and work. Itโs not a quick fix. That forms the basis of the new film in the โChange Their Storyโ campaign, which follows a young boy recounting a childhood birthday. It begins with him telling a story of a perfect day, surrounded by friends, family, presents and a huge cake topped with candles. The story is then retold again and again. With each blow of the candle, more of the facade is chipped away to get to the truth; that his birthdays werenโt very special. The story ends with the boy, now in his teens, opening up about his real childhood experience to a Barnardos keyworker. All laddering up to the enduring line, โBecause childhood lasts a lifetime.โ BBH Dublin worked closely with Barnardos to capture the reality of the healing process on film--how itโs an ongoing journey that requires continued support. David Leon directed via production company Iconoclast. Evonne OโRourke, production lead, BBH Dublin, added, โWe felt a real responsibility to produce a piece of work that had impact and the power to support the brilliant work that Barnardos does. We knew we had a great script on our hands, but it was crucial that the idea was underpinned by craft that protected the authenticity of the story. โIt was a fine balance to strike--the production design, edit, sound design and color grade all had key parts to play in shaping and enhancing the narrative but not in a way that would overpower or become the focal point of the film.โ [video width="1920" height="1080"... Read More