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- <text id=91TT1565>
- <title>
- July 15, 1991: Advertising Spoken Here
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 15, 1991 Misleading Labels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 71
- Advertising Spoken Here
- </hdr><body>
- <p>At an international festival of television commercials, the
- hottest spots reveal a world of cultural differences
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Cannes
- </p>
- <p> Five weeks after its glamorous film festival, the French
- Riviera town of Cannes once again becomes the scene of a major
- international competition. Top filmmakers from around the world--from Argentina to Yugoslavia--offer their work. World-class
- directors like Ridley Scott and Spike Lee capture the moment.
- Performers from Madonna to Mickey Rourke play to collective
- fantasies. But this time there is one crucial difference: most
- of the movies flash by in 15 to 90 seconds.
- </p>
- <p> This is the other Cannes festival--the 38th
- International Advertising Film Festival. Here some 4,500 art
- directors, copywriters and filmmakers gathered to assess nearly
- 4,000 of the world's top television commercials. Schmaltzy or
- sexy, slick or surreal, suspenseful or satirical, the hottest
- spots were awarded 80 gold, silver or bronze "Lions" by a
- 23-member international jury.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. always submits the most entries: 781 this year,
- followed by Britain with 387, Spain with 336 and Japan with 318.
- But it no longer wins the most awards. The recent explosion of
- commercial TV in Europe, Asia and Latin America has fostered a
- burst of freewheeling talent. This year's grand prize went to
- a stylish French commercial (also aired in the U.S.) in which
- a lion and a tawny woman climb up opposite sides of a mountain,
- and at the peak the woman outroars the lion for a bottle of
- Perrier. Another winner was a spectacular English spot for
- Reebok sneakers in which a Mohawk steelworker sprints and leaps
- atop an Atlanta skyscraper. The ad is so scary that it was
- banned from British TV. Overall, Britain won the most Lions--20 compared with the U.S.'s 14. Australia and Spain tied for
- third place with nine awards each.
- </p>
- <p> One U.S. entry met a shocking rebuff. It is a
- lump-in-the-throat spot about Mike Sewell, a youth born with
- Down's syndrome, who found a job and happiness at McDonald's.
- The crowd in the giant auditorium at Cannes greeted it with
- raucous boos and whistles. "This is the most vicious, cynical,
- jaded audience in the world," said Marcio Moreira, creative
- director of McCann-Erickson Worldwide. "They don't like to have
- their emotions manipulated."
- </p>
- <p> The reaction was a reminder that advertising, no less than
- any other art, bares the psyche of a nation. "Schmaltz is an
- American idiom," said Moreira. "We're a people who cherish
- wearing our feelings on our sleeve." Along with wavy fields of
- grain and golden, hazy images of plump grandparents, another
- American penchant is for the hard sell: buy because it tastes
- good, or because it works better.
- </p>
- <p> By contrast, the British are embarrassed by the direct
- approach, preferring humor. "British ads are funnier because the
- British themselves are funnier," says Dutch adman Bart Kuiper.
- One cheeky British spot, titled The Hopping Pecker, shows a
- cartoon image of a male organ knocking at a red heart-shaped
- door and being refused entry until it coifs a condom.
- </p>
- <p> Humor is rarer in France, which goes for abstract, elegant
- and often sur realistic images (such as the
- Perrier-on-the-mount spot) with no direct message. In one French
- ad, a handsome man picks up a svelte woman on the road and
- drives her home through a thunderstorm as they exchange long
- glances. It turns out to be a spot for Renault--but it says
- little about the car. In contrast, German ads are mostly blunt:
- Buy Soviet-made Ladas, one East German distributor exhorts,
- because they cost no more than secondhand West German cars.
- Italy's gold winner is a frankly self-mocking spot with shots
- of fully dressed men adjusting their underwear in public. "We've
- cured Italian men of a bad habit," intones the announcer,
- leading into a pitch for Johnny Lambs boxer shorts.
- </p>
- <p> As for Japanese ads, it seems only the Japanese understand
- them. One baffling spot features a man eating a parking ticket
- in front of a meter maid; I LOVE OSAKA, says the kicker. "The
- cultural gap is so great," commented Allen Rosenshine, chairman
- of BBDO Worldwide and president of the Cannes jury, "that it is
- almost impossible for the West to appreciate Japanese
- commercials." But the Japanese clearly have cachet. One
- prizewinning Italian spot for oven paper has a Japanese
- delivering the sales pitch in his own language, without
- subtitles. For most viewers, his body language must suffice.
- </p>
- <p> With the world's economy in a downturn, many industrial
- clients opted for safe, conventional pitches, leaving some of
- the most daring filmmaking for public-service spots. Torture,
- smoking, rain-forest destruction, homelessness and global
- warming are among the issues that prompted 209 such entries. A
- heart-stopping British ad against incest shows a little girl
- lining her stuffed animals against her bedroom door to prevent
- her father from entering. Most controversial was an Australian
- insurance company's antispeeding campaign, showing violent car
- crashes with screaming victims and dying, bloody children. It
- won a gold Lion--and a chorus of angry whistles from the
- audience. "Terrorist advertising," charged French television
- producer Jerome Bonaldi. But BBDO's Rosenshine defended the
- spots' "irrevocable impact," saying, "You're never going to
- forget them."
- </p>
- <p> The prevailing serious mood was mirrored in the growing
- use of ecology as a selling tool. In an irreverent German spot
- for Mercedes-Benz, a man admires his gleaming sedan with its
- catalytic converter, then climbs onto a bicycle instead and
- rides away. "We can never really do enough for the environment,"
- says the narrator. An offbeat British ad shows a Navajo trucker
- trying to send smoke signals from his exhaust pipe to friends
- across a canyon. It doesn't work because he has switched to
- Shell diesel fuel.
- </p>
- <p> Even that old advertising standby, naked female flesh, was
- rare in this year's festival. True, one Norwegian ad shows a
- jolly couple making love. But then they pause, and the woman
- winds up her partner with a huge key. Declares the voice-over:
- "Det Nye is the magazine for girls who make their own
- decisions." In another feminist campaign, the latest Maidenform
- underwear spots from the U.S. invite viewers to contrast today's
- free-form lingerie with the historic oppression of women within
- bone- and wire-framed corsets and bustles.
- </p>
- <p> In Europe audiences flock to movie theaters early to watch
- the commercials and break into applause for the best ones.
- Americans are more casual, even disdainful about ads, but when
- they gather at their back fences or around office water coolers,
- they discuss them as avidly as they do the shows that surround
- them. The five-day Cannes festival celebrates the wit and
- imagination that prompt that interest. As New Zealander John
- Doig of the Mc Caffrey and McCall agency put it, "We come here
- to remind ourselves that ads don't just sell. They also make the
- little hairs stand up on the back of the neck."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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