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Details - Art & Copy Film Hong Kong (Screening 2)
Event
- Title:
- Art & Copy Film Hong Kong (Screening 2)
- When:
- Fri 6 Aug 19:00
- Where:
- Philia Lounge
- Category:
- Special & Exclusive
Description
ART & COPY is a powerful new film about advertising and inspirtion.
Directed by Doug Pray (SURFWISE, SCRATCH, HYPE!), it reveals the work
and wisdom of some of the most influential advertising creatives of our
time -- people who’ve profoundly impacted our culture, yet are virtually
unknown outside their industry. Exploding forth from advertising’s
“creative revolution” of the 1960s, these artists and writers all
brought a surprisingly rebellious spirit to their work in a business
more often associated with mediocrity or manipulation: George Lois, Mary
Wells, Dan Wieden, Lee Clow, Hal Riney and others featured in ART &
COPY were responsible for “Just Do It,” “I Love NY,” “Where’s the
Beef?,” “Got Milk,” “Think Different,” and brilliant campaigns for
everything from cars to presidents. They managed to grab the attention
of millions and truly move them. Visually interwoven with their stories,
TV satellites are launched, billboards are erected, and the social and
cultural impact of their ads are brought to light in this dynamic
exploration of art, commerce, and human emotion.
SCREENING DATE: 30th July, 2010 & 6th August, 2010
SCREENING DATE: 7pm (Hello nice to meet you time)
9pm (screening begins)
TICKETS: FREE for Advertising & Media Personnel – present name card
at door
HK$100 available at the door (inc. one drink)
SCREENING LOCATION: Philia Lounge
中環亞畢諾道4-8號地下舖
G/F
, 4-8 Arbuthnot Rd, Central, HK
RUNNING TIME: 90 Minutes
OFFICIAL WEBSITE: www.artandcopyfilm.com
R.S.V.P. to
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
(Limited Seating)
More info at Facebook “Art & Copy Film Hong Kong”
AWARDS
Official Sundance Selection, 2009
Best Director in Documentary Film at Atlanta Film Festival
Grand Prize at Roving Eye Documentary Film Festival
Outstanding Achievement in Documentary Filmmaking at Newport Beach Film
Festival
DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
Hate advertising? Make better ads.
When I began making ART & COPY back in 2005, it seemed like a
significant departure from my previous documentaries. Instead of dark
clubs, back alleys and truck stops, I was now filming in light-filled,
architecturally breathtaking West Coast ad agencies and pristine New
York City penthouses. Instead of underground artists and angry
independents, I was interviewing people who were worth millions and were
pioneers of an industry that literally defines mainstream culture.
Now that the movie is finished, I see more similarities than
differences. My subjects in ART & COPY, though dressed in finer
clothes and a few decades older, have actually exhibited a rebellious
voice not unlike the graffiti writers or screaming rock singers I’ve
shot in the past, even though they’re working from deep within the
system. They still regard themselves as underdogs. They think they are
misunderstood by society. They’re all fiercely independent mavericks.
But mostly, they too have a personal message—one
that transcends the commercial messages they create—that seemingly has
to get out. Like my other films, this ad film is about the innate human
urge to express oneself creatively.
It crystallized for me in the jungle in French Guiana last summer. We’d
gone there to film the launch of a commercial satellite to make the
documentary less talking-heads and more visually exciting. I figured
that if satellites bring us television, and television is paid for by
ads, then… ads launch satellites. It was a way to marvel at the lengths
we go to deliver dog food commercials. But there in the forest, a short
distance from the Arianespace rocket launch site, was a small outcrop of
boulders with a dozen ancient petroglyphs carved into them (the ones
seen at the start of the film). The drawings told stories about what
once happened to some prehistoric person, and what they did or didn’t
want their lives to be. They had something to say, and they used
communication tools to say it. Art and copy. Same thing… different
format.
What’s different and perhaps surprising about this movie, is that zzit
isn’t about bad advertising, that 98% which so often annoys and
disrespects its audience. I didn’t want to make a doc that just trashes
trashy advertising. Too easy, too obvious, and why bother? Instead,
granted access to a handful of the greatest advertising minds of the
last fifty years, I felt it could be a more powerful statement to focus
the film only on those rare few who actually moved and inspired our
culture with their work. And that higher standard made me want to make a
film that reflected the same kind of disciplined artistic approach that
my subjects used.
Therefore, director of photography Peter Nelson, editor Philip Owens,
and I avoided a gritty, handheld doc vibe, and aspired to a classier,
more artistic approach in our coverage and editing. We shot lots of
steady B-roll and wanted to create a film experience more like
“Koyanisqaatsi” or Errol Morris’ “Fast Cheap and Out of Control.”
Musically, I chose to work with Jeff Martin (a.k.a. Idaho) whose
mesmerizing compositions put me into a deeper state of mind, while
moving the picture along. In my interviews, I stuck to emotions,
creative motivation, and big-idea philosophies of the ad creatives
rather than “how-to” stories, industry-insider talk, or the politics of
their clients’ products (which is a different film altogether). I knew
the film wasn’t going to be “Adbusters,” it wasn’t “Mad Men,” and none
of us wanted to just make a straight tribute film to these ad
legends—not even the One Club, the non-profit advertising organization
who funded
the project and provided access to them (and, for the record, did not
dictate the creative content of the film). I simply wanted to know: who
are these unknown people who’ve so profoundly shaped our culture, and
what can we learn from them?
It was, of course, inspiring to meet these creatives and hear their
passion for effective communication and their anger at boring clients
and market research, but what amazed me was how much their commercial
work was a direct reflection of their personal lives. How Mary Wells’
zany and theatrical ads were a result of growing up in a family that
hardly ever communicated. How George Lois spent his youth fighting on
the streets of West Bronx and kept right on fighting the status quo in
his ads for MTV and Hilfiger. Or how the late Hal Riney’s depression-era
childhood robbed him of the very emotions that he spent a lifetime
recreating in his ads for Saturn, Gallo, and Reagan. By interviewing
these icons, they became real for me, and I saw advertising as an art
form with enormous potential—when done well.
Yes, I’ve made a positive film about ads. I’d once believed that our
systems of commerce might go away, and with them, all unwanted
commercial messaging, but they haven’t yet, and won’t soon. Advertising,
in fact, may actually be an innately human act itself. But like all
creative endeavors (books, paintings, movies, architecture) most of it
is mediocre. Ultimately, I hope “ART & COPY” inspires artists and
writers to strive to make more meaningful, more entertaining, or more
socially uplifting ads. With so much advertising surrounding us these
days, it would be great to get that 2% figure a bit higher.
- DOUG PRAY
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