CR Annual: the winners
Tue May 13, 2008 – 05:18
Original Post:
CR
Annual: the winners / creative review
The May issue of Creative Review (above) features 100 pages of work selected for this year's Annual. The very best of those make up our Best In Book section: details of the winners here…
This year's Best In Books are:
Mini Clubman interactive ads by Glue London
Glue London was behind the online launch of the classic Mini Clubman,
creating a series of interactive spots that highlighted the
car’s elongated shape, its handling and the
quirkiness particular to the Clubman brand (check them out here.
“To show it off in the best possible light, we did a
bespoke one-day shoot for the rich media formats,†says
Glue. “High production values are always important
to us, whatever format we’re working in and
especially with a product like this. We also concentrated on getting
the right level of interaction so we could engage people without asking
them to do too much. Superglue, our interactive film team, did a great
job of bringing it all to life in a very tight timeframe.â€
The interactive work plays on the idea that ‘things
aren’t always what they seem’
and, in one example featuring a scrolling 360º view of the
new model, the chunky rear of the car breaks through the actual frame
of the ad. In another spot the preconceptions of the
Mini’s size are dispelled as what seems to be a
model of the car approaches a tiny, looping race track, only for it to
be demolished under the full size wheels of the real thing.
Cadbury's Gorilla by Fallon London/Blink Productions
Undoubtedly the most talked/blogged about commercial of last year,
Gorilla hardly needs any further words of explanation. But, for any
readers that haven’t experienced the spot, it was a
90-second number for Cadbury’s Dairy Milk that
employed the surprising combination of Phil Collins, a drum kit and a
talented gorilla. Was it actually Phil in a gorilla outfit? Was it a
real gorilla playing drums? These and many other questions abounded
after this well-observed spot aired, whilst In the Air Tonight was
suddenly reborn in the collective memory (along with the opportunity to
shout “Woah Lord†and pump a fist in
pleasure). And that’s what the joyous spot was all
about â€" raising a smile.
Things I have learned in my life so far, Sagmeister
inc.
Stefan Sagmeister’s Things I Have Learned In My Life
So Far is a monograph of work that has been made by the designer since
his “experimental year†in 2000, when he
took time out from creating commercial projects. During that year,
Sagmeister devised a list of maxims (such as
‘Everything I do comes back to
me’ and ‘Worrying solves
nothing’), which, despite their personal and
philosophical nature, quickly became incorporated into work for clients
when his office reopened. The book details 20 of these projects in a
collection of separate booklets, all housed in a die-cut slipcase.
Readers can create alternate outer covers by shuffling the booklets.
The work produced from the maxims appears in wildly varying forms, and
has been published all over the world in spaces normally reserved for
advertising or promotions; on billboards, magazine spreads, and even on
the cover of an annual report. “They are all made
for different clients and different countries, yet form a coherent
series and it made sense to make a book about them,†says
Sagmeister. Alongside the artwork, Sagmeister explains the story behind
each maxim in the book, offering an insight into his personal
experiences and the way that he works, as well as how the maxim came to
be used for an individual client.
Chocolate Man by Vegaolmosponce
Quite why Lynx has created a deodourising body spray that smells like
chocolate may well be completely beyond the comprehension of many of
our readers. But create such a product Lynx has and this spot,
Chocolate Man, created by Buenos Aires-based agency Vegaolmosponce,
promotes it memorably in time-honoured Lynx tradition. In the ad, a
young man sprays himself with the stuff one morning and promptly
transforms into a man made entirely of chocolate. At Creative Review
we’ve never seen young women pout and rub themselves
suggestively in the presence of chocolate, but as this is Lynx,
Chocolate Man is irresistible to any ladies (and there are many) in his
path. One by one they helplessly succumb to the
protagonist’s chocolatey charms, biting his bum on
the tube, nibbling his face in the cinema, laughing flirtatiously at
the notion of eating his fingers. A particularly brazen group of
chocolate-crazed women even break off one of his arms in a drive-by
scenario as he cheerily waves to a gym full of wanton chocolate-loving
hussies. “I’m not sure you could
have had as much fun or been as risqué if the man had not
been made out of chocolate,†notes Annual jury member Paul
Cohen of AMV BBDO. “The chocolate
man is a great place to get to in the context of what the product has
come to stand for.â€
Fabric posters by Village Green
“Fabric tends to like its visuals to lean towards
the darker end of the spectrum,†says design studio Village
Green’s Tom Darracott, the designer behind this
range of striking posters for the London-based nightclub.
“My intention was to create a series of characters
rather than a series of images of people wearing masks,â€
says Darracott. “I wanted these characters to seem
‘believable’ even though the
masks they’re wearing are entirely
fantastical.†All of the masks were handmade at Village
Green with only minor retouching done in post-production. Darracott
created one mask that touched on pagan ancestry (the Green Man) and a
vibrant red creation that was based on Oskar
Schlemmer’s costumes for Bauhaus theatre
productions. For the final mask in the series, Darracott wanted to
reference the plague doctors who tended to the victims of the 17th
century disease that swept through London. “The long
snout would have been stuffed with aromatic herbs and flowers in the
belief that the pungent fragrance would protect the wearer from the
disease,†says Darracott.
“I’d read that the Smithfield
area of London, where Fabric is located, was heavily hit by the
outbreak and was also home to a number of plague burial sites or
‘plague pits’, so
it’s a bit of a historical tribute to the
area.â€
Orange Unlimited website by Poke
Poke was briefed by mobile communications company Orange to design
something to promote its Unlimited range of products, which use the
tagline, ‘Good things should never
end’. Poke’s solution was to
create what it claims is the world’s first infinite
website. “We hoped that the idea of a never-ending
web page would intrigue people,†says
Poke’s Iain Tait, “and that once
people arrived at the site, we’d manage to keep them
engaged by throwing loads of quirky and playful bits and bobs at them.
It seemed to work.†A host of blobby cartoon characters
inhabit the site and there are games, puzzles and chat facilities to
play with along the way. But scroll as you might, the path down the
descending rainbow never ends and the layout of the page is never the
same twice (see the site here).
Procrastination by Johnny Kelly
Director Johnny Kelly, now signed to London-based production company
Nexus, created his animated film Procrastination while still an MA
student at the Royal College of Art. Procrastination is, in
Kelly’s own words, “a hands-on,
gloves-off study into the practice of putting things offâ€,
and is as visually engaging as it is universally topical.
We’re all familiar with the fine art of doing
something else other than that which is most pressing and
Kelly’s film sees him employ a variety of animation
techniques as it works through a list of the various forms that
procrastination can take, each announced to superb comic effect by
voiceover artist Bryan Quinn. “We were asked to
produce a film on a topic of our choice and given a year to do it
â€" so Procrastination came out of the struggles I was
having with such an open brief,†explains Kelly of his
choice of subject. “Eventually I stopped floundering
around with worthy concepts and overworking ideas and just started
making sequences based on my own personal experience.â€
Skoda Cake by Fallon London
Hugely popular, Fallon’s Cake ad for Skoda depicts a
group of white-coated home economists busily making a full-size car
â€" out of cake. Real cake. Yes, over a ton of ingredients
(1,238.5 kilograms to be precise) were used â€" along with
180 eggs â€" to create the cake car for real. To make the
ad, Fallon pulled together an impressive team that included one of the
best production designers in the film industry, six home economists,
three sugar chefs, a machine operator/baker, two prop masters and four
SFX modelmakers â€" all of whom make an appearance in the
finished ad. But what happened to the cake-car afterwards? Despite
plans to cut the cake up and distribute it to local charities, schools
and hospitals, production designer Brian Morris explained to us why
none of it was eaten: “Unfortunately, as the car had
been under hot studio lights for several days, it would have posed a
health and safety risk if eaten. Some parts were preserved though, such
as the marzipan wing-mirrors and chocolate speedometer. The rest of the
car, I hear, was composted and will be used by the residents of
Clapton, East London, to fertilise their gardens and
allotments.â€
zzz is playing: grip music video by Roel Wouters
Roel Wouters’ video for the band zZz was the first
made by the Amsterdam-based designer-artist-filmmaker, yet it quickly
wowed Nexus Productions in London, who signed Wouters for
representation at the end of last year, as well as us at Creative
Review. Wouters became one of our Creative Futures this year largely on
the strength of this video, alongside his other film and design
projects. Part of the appeal of the video is the fact that it was
recorded live, in one take. It was filmed as part of the opening of the
exhibition Nederclips at the Stedelijk Museum
‘s-Hertogenbosch SMS in The Netherlands, and sees
trampoÂlining gymnasts simulating typical video editing
effects, shot from above. “The important criteria
were that the audience at the opening would be able to witness the
whole shoot, and that the video clip would be added to the exhibition
immediately after the shoot,†Wouters explains.
“This meant that we had no option to reshoot or edit
if something went wrong, which made the whole crew so focused that we
performed even better than any of us imagined.†Among the
effects that are simulated in the video are the loading bar at the
bottom of an Mpeg, created by someone painting a line on the floor, as
well as the all-too-familiar Apple spinning wheel. Technology has
rarely looked as charming. See more of Wouters' work here .
Tide Interview by Saatchi & Saatchi New York
This ad isn’t a big blockbuster of a commercial, but
the Annual jury was really taken with it. The ad shows a rather
stern-looking gentleman seated behind a desk interviewing a job
applicant. As soon as said applicant responds to the questions posed by
his potential employer, his voice is drowned out by a stream of vocal
yabbering, rendering his reply totally incomprehensible. When he stops
talking, so does the annoying chitter-chatter. Another question is
posed and, once again, the young hopeful’s response
is accompanied by senseless jibber-jabber â€" to which he
seems completely oblivious. Only now the viewer can see that a rather
unsightly stain on the interviewee’s shirt is the
source of the extra noise and is even animated to look as if it has a
talking mouth. Then comes the strapline: ‘Silence
the stain’. Wonderfully shot and brilliantly cast,
this is engaging and funny stuff for a distinctly unglamorous
product.
The Annual issue of CR is on sale now







