ShowBusinessMan [Search results for man

  • Rockwell by name, Rockwell by nature, or "Welcome to the MOON!"

     Rockwell by name, Rockwell by nature, or "Welcome to the MOON!"

    Sam Rockwell

    Sam Rockwell | MOON

    I'm constantly altering the order of the entrants in my hypothetical `favourite actor's list'.However, one permanent feature has been the always awesome and versatile Sam Rockwell. Since his debut in the teen-horror Clownhouse, the 40-year-old has gone on to become a one-man gallery of crooks, rogues and oddballs. Critics adore him. Cinephiles applaud him. Yet still he manages to tread comfortably on the line between stardom and obscurity. Touted as `the next big thing’ for over a decade, Rockwell has made a career of playing the anti-hero. He shifts between supporting roles and leading parts as if they were gears in a car and is widely considered one of the finest actors working today. With a name like a character from an Austin Powers movie, Rockwell is the go-to man for directors with controversial or challenging parts. Thus, when Duncan Jones, son of David Bowie, entered into a career as a filmmaker it’s no wonder he wrote his debut feature Moon as a vehicle for Sam Rockwell. As audiences worldwide prepare to see him in the biggest the role of his career, I thought I'd put together this piece to look back at some of the his most memorable performances.

    His breakthrough performance was in 1997 as a lovable oddity in Tom DiCillo’s Box of Moonlight. He went on to star in a number indie drama’s and had his first foray in to studio pictures as a child murderer in The Green Mile (below). Despite only having a small amount of screen time, Rockwell left a lasting impression as the charismatic killer.

    Charisma was again a major feature in his role as Eric Knox in Charlie’s Angels. One of his most well-known parts, Rockwell was unforgettable as the quirky and deranged super-villain who was just as comfortable moon-walking to Pharaoh Monche as he was shooting missiles from his helicopter. However, it was his leading turn in George Clooney’s directorial debut Confessions of a Dangerous Mind that certified Rockwell as a rising talent. He won the Silver Berlin Bear for best actor at the Berlin International Film Festival for playing game show impresario Chuck Barris, who claimed to have been a CIA hitman.

    With a growing reputation as a diverse character actor, Rockwell went on to star in several large supporting roles in films such as Matchstick Men, A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Snow Angels and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. Perhaps his most controversial role was as a sex-addicted con-man in last year’s Choke which is based on a book by Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk. As a serious actor it would be difficult to find a juicer part than that of a man who pays for his mothers hospital bills by playing on the sympathies of those who save him from choking to death. On the surface it’s the kind of character that audiences should have loathed but Rockwell threw himself in to the part making him poignant and hilarious. He followed Choke with the Oscar nominated Frost/Nixon where he played passionate political writer James Preston Jr.

    Although he has spent much of his career playing second fiddle, in his latest film Rockwell is back at leading-man. In fact, he is the only actor in Moon. He plays astronaut Sam Bell (below) who is wrapping up a three-year stint on the moon where he has been overseeing the mining interests of the Lunar Corporation. With the exception of recorded messages from his family and bosses back on Earth, his only company is the base’s computer Gerty (voiced by Kevin Spacey). That is until he meets a younger, angrier version of himself who claims to be there to fulfil the same three-year contract. Engaging the eye as much as the mind, Moon draws from classic science-fiction films and is propelled by an intense performance from Rockwell. Taking out the best British film award at the Edinburgh film festival earlier this year, it has been hailed as a remarkable debut from Duncan Jones who wrote the film to lure Rockwell in to working with him.

    Made on a budget of $5 million and shot in 33 days, Moon has been hailed as an intelligent, intriguing and unique film held together by Rockwell’s performance. Critics have tipped this as the film to finally elevate the American actor to A-List, leading man status. Whether this will actually come to fruition remains to be seen, however Rockwell seems content with his position in modern day cinema. If nothing else the role will be another display of brilliance from the actor and can be added to his repertoire of unusual characters. In the mean time, his next move is away from the indie-circuit and back in to blockbuster mode as he stars alongside Robert Downey Jr, Scarlett Johansson, Gwyneth Paltrow and Mickey Rourke in Iron Man 2.

  • Kieth Stone "Man Bag" The Definitive Explanation

    Kieth Stone "Man Bag" The Definitive Explanation

    Keystone Light spokesman Kieth Stone explains how to use a "man bag" in the newest TV commercial Keystone.

    Smooth Musings with Kieth Stone "If your going to carry a man bag, make sure it's more man than bag. Like a 100% to 0% man to bag ratio, and that's it no bigger than the size of a wallet or a money clip...that it fits in your pocket like a wallet or a money clip. That it's a wallet or a money clip". Get it gentlemen?

    Credits:
    Client: Keystone Light / MillerCoors
    Spot Title: Man Bag
    Air Date: June 2012
    Agency: Saatchi NY
    Chief Creative Officer: Conway Williamson
    Creative Director: Justin Ebert, Alex Lea, Ian Falcon
    Associate Creative Director: Ron Villacarillo
    Senior Art Director: Jacqueline Mellow
    Senior Copywriter Mike Maher
    Art Director: Taylor Lucas Junior
    Producer: Ian Kelly
    Production Co.: Tool
    Director: JJ Adler
    EPs: Brian Latt, Oliver Fuselier, Dustin Callif

  • The Kool-Aid Man Is Back In New "Smile" Ads...Oh Yeah!

    The Kool-Aid Man Is Back In New "Smile" Ads...Oh Yeah!

    Ad agency Saatchi & Saatchi reinvents the iconic Kool-Aid man and "Oh Yeah" he's still busting through walls.

    Kool-Aid is unveiling a new look for its big red mascot Monday, as the powdered drink brand looks to refresh its image and tout a new liquid mix.
    The Kool-Aid Man, known for busting through walls and his "Oh yeah!" tagline, will now be computer-generated and take on the personality of a celebrity trying to show he's just a normal guy. In past ads, the character was played by an actor in foam costume and had little to say or do besides crashing through a wall with a big, smiley face.
    The campaign comes as Kool-Aid plays up its liquid mix, which debuted in January. The new mix reflects a push by Kraft Foods to adjust to changing tastes and replicate the success of its liquid flavour enhancer called MiO.
    MiO, which people squirt into water for flavour, has already spawned copycats including Coca-Cola Co.'s Dasani Drops. Executives say people like them because the small bottles are easier to carry around than powder mixes and let people add as much or as little flavour as they like.
    The growing popularity of liquid mixes hasn't been good for Kool-Aid. In 2012, the brand's U.S. sales were down 5 per cent to $338 million, according to the market researcher Euromonitor International. That was following a 4 per cent drop the previous year.
    The liquid mix is a return to Kool-Aid's roots. It began as a syrup called "Fruit Smack" in 1920. The product wasn't modified into a concentrated powder until 1927, when it was renamed "Kool-Ade." The current spelling followed in the early 1930s.
    The Kool-Aid Man, meanwhile, made his first appearance in 1954 and has taken on various looks through the years. Kraft says his last big makeover was in 2000.
    'He didn't really have a developed personality'Erica Rendall, senior brand manager at Kraft Foods Group Inc., says the new ads are intended to fill in the blanks in Kool-Aid Man's character so people can relate to him.
    "He said a few things here and there [in the past], but he really didn't have a developed personality," she said.
    In one of the new commercials, the scene opens with the character's round silhouette behind a shower curtain. When he steps out, he's a clear pitcher of water and he explains in a voiceover that his life isn't all "cherry and sweetness."
    "I put my pants on one leg at a time," the voiceover notes, as he stands in front of a pantry full of Kool-Aid mixes deciding what to wear. "Except my pants are 22 different flavours. I've got grape pants, I've got watermelon pants."
    But Kraft isn't abandoning trademarks of its past campaigns in the new ads, which were developed by the ad agency Saatchi & Saatchi. At the end of the commercial, the Kool-Aid Man heads out to work by calming busting through the front door. When he emerges, he waves cheerily to two awestruck kids riding their bikes past his front lawn. via: CBCnews — AP

  • The Story of The Man that Makes the Shoes That Make the Man

    The Story of The Man that Makes the Shoes That Make the Man

    The latest work from Australian ad agency Moon, for Julius Marlow Shoes is an adventurous tale of the man that makes the shoes that make the man.

    Credits:
    Advertising Agency: Moon Communications Group

  • Muhammad Ali's "Dream" for Louis Vuitton | The Greatest Words

    Muhammad Ali's "Dream" for Louis Vuitton | The Greatest Words

    Louis Vuitton pays tribute to The Greatest — Muhammad Ali with the digital experience The Greatest Words. The brands first ever web film campaign, features Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) reciting two poetic speeches made famous by Ali.

    To convey this message of self-discovery and exploration, the House has captured the journeys of some of the world's most extraordinary personalities.
    A unique journey goes beyond destination.
    It is about courage, inspiration, dream, life.
    This journey is about a man who stood up for the ideals he believed in, a man whose victories but also defeats left a mark on the world, a man whose incisive words reached billions and still echo today.
    A man named Muhammad Ali.

    Spoken Word Artist Yasiin Bey and calligrapher Niels Shoe Meulman revisit the words of Mohammad Ali and the infamous "Dream".

    Credits:
    Created by the ad agency Ogilvy, Paris.

  • "Naked Man" Shops From GotStyle With His SmartPhone

    "Naked Man" Shops From GotStyle With His SmartPhone

    Here is a new entertaining spot for GotStyle entitled "Naked Man" featuring a man buying from Gotstyle over his mobile device. Created by the ad agency Dorsey/Holme Experience, the spot promotes the retailer's new shopping service where customers can build their wardrobe in collaboration with a company representative via Skype or FaceTime.

    Gotstyle is one of Canada's top menswear stores located in Toronto and if shopping from home in the nude makes you happy then click your way over to http://gotstyle.ca and shop away.

    Credits:
    Spot Title: Naked Man
    Client: Gotstyle Menswear
    Ad Agency: Dorsey/Holme Experience
    Creative Director: Gary Holme
    Strategist: Stephen Dorsey
    Art Directors: Gary Holme, Jay Melnychuk
    Writers: Gary Holme, Jay Melnychuk, Joseph Nanni
    Account Management: Michele Manila
    Director: Joseph Nanni
    Production Company: FRANK
    Executive Producers: Danielle Kappy, Michael Schwartz
    Director of Photography: Alan Lukatela
    Production Manager: Jeremy Sager
    Editorial Company: School Editing
    Offline Editor: Jon DeVries
    Offline Editorial Assistant: Lauren Horn
    Online Artist: Paul Binney
    Online Assistant: James Marin
    Executive Producer: Sarah Brooks
    Colour Transfer: Tricia Hagoriles, Alter Ego
    Sound/Music: Silent Joe/Orange Studio
    Music Producers: Marco DiFelice, Tom Thorney, Christine Leslie

  • "SuperMan Man Of Steel" Preview Teaser Poster

    "SuperMan Man Of Steel" Preview Teaser Poster

    A preview teaser movie poster was released at Comic-Con 2012 for the much anticipated "SuperMan Man Of Steel" movie.

    Man of Steel stars Henry Cavill as Clark Kent and Amy Adams as Lois Lane. It features Kevin Costner and Diane Lane as Mr. and Mrs. Kent and Laurence Fishburne as Perry White. Superman's mother Lara Lor-Van is being played by Ayelet Zurer, and his father, Jor-El, will be played by Russell Crowe. Man of Steel is directed by Zack Snyder.

  • Isaiah Mustafa is MANta Claus For Old Spice

    Isaiah Mustafa is MANta Claus For Old Spice

    Isaiah Mustafa is back in a new ad campaign for Old Spice, MANta Claus and Old Spice plan to give out 7 billion gifts.

    Day 1 — The Man Your Man Could Smell Like begins his quest to give a gift to every single person on Earth this holiday season, including an elegant pair of ladyshoes made out of necklaces to a close, personal friend.

    Day 1 — 25 friends get 25 bear-shaped deodorant protectors, and 25 criminals get 25 reasons to not steal any deodorant.

    Day 1 — "The Greatest City in America" gets a promotion-promoting letter-gift in the December 6th edition of the Baltimore Sun.

    Day 1 — After 1.5 kabillion years, The Man Your Man Could Smell Like finally gets around to explaining how Australia got awesome.

    Day 1 results as of December 5,2011....Isaiah Mustafa, The Old Spice MANta Claus has given gifts to 25,390,651 people.

    Credits:
    Ad Agency: Wieden + Kennedy

  • Charles Barkley "Lose Like A Man" for Weight Watchers Ad Campaign

    Charles Barkley "Lose Like A Man" for Weight Watchers Ad Campaign

    Charles Barkley teams up with Weight Watchers in new "Lose Like a Man" online ad campaign. Weight Watchers International, recently introduced National Basketball Association (NBA) Hall of Famer and current "NBA on TNT" studio analyst Charles Barkley as the ambassador of its new Weight Watchers for Men campaign. The dominant and outspoken former power forward and current television personality will appear in print, broadcast, and online marketing beginning December 25, 2011, as part of the new "Lose Like a Man" advertising platform.

    Above, a behind the scenes of a Weight Watchers commercial with Charles Barkley as he talks about his decision to get healthy.

    Charles Barkley tells us why he's getting healthy with Weight Watchers in this commercial "Being A Role Model."

    Charles Weighs in on "Nicknames" in this ad.

    This time Sir Charles Weighs in on Man Food.

  • Eva Longoria Demonstrates The Perfect Valentines Day Gift For Your Man

    Eva Longoria Demonstrates The Perfect Valentines Day Gift For Your Man

    If you are hoping to get the best from your man this Valentines Day, L'Oréal suggests flirting it out of him with a shave. Eva Longoria and L'Oréal Men Expert celebrate Valentine's Day by giving a man a sensual shave in this new ad campaign. Eva illustrates the three steps to cleaning up your man...
    Step 1 — CLEANSE — get him to clean up
    Step 2 — SHAVE — don't let him irritate you
    Step 3 — MOISTURISE — keep him hydrated for 24 hours

  • Ram Trucks "Man Made Drama"

    Ram Trucks "Man Made Drama"

    Mad Made Drama” is a tribute to the power of Ram Commercial trucks and man’s ability to shape the world around us through hard work and sheer will. Directed by Lucky Twenty One’s The Chartrands for advertising agency The Richards Group, the spot was edited by Lucky Post’s Logan Hefflefinger.

    The Chartrands scouted “Man Made Drama” in and around Portland in a Ram Truck, shooting additional footage along the way. To capture the desired images of both the truck and the surrounding environments, including a cameo by a highly trained Wolf Dog, the duo shot using a Phantom, Klaus Cam and car rig. “The agency provided a great concept and the trust to allow us to explore and elaborate,” comments Marc Chartrand. “Plus, they encouraged us to really put the truck through its paces and get it dirty which adds a level authenticity, not to mention fun,” adds Melanie Chartrand.

    Lucky Post’s Logan Hefflefinger shaped the footage, honing the visual narrative in collaboration with The Chartrands: “The Chartrands are incredibly talented and shoot with the edit in mind, providing a wealth of beautiful footage from which to craft the story.” Meanwhile, Lucky Post’s Seth Olson created graphics highlighting the Full Line’s accolades and Scottie Richardson designed a soundscape with intensity to match the visual narrative.

    “It was another great experience with The Chartrands and the folks at Lucky Post. We're lucky to have such talent,” concludes Rob Baker, Brand Creative with The Richards Group.

    Credits:
    Client: Chrysler Group LLC
    Chief Marketing Officer, Chrysler Group LLC: Olivier Francois
    Head of Advertising, Ram Truck Brand: Marissa Hunter
    Ram Advertising Specialist: Nicole Pesale

    Agency: The Richards Group
    Brand Creative: Rob Baker, Jimmy Bonner, Lori Wittig & Jeff Hodgson
    Brand Management: Dennis Berchulc, Chris Siminski, & Jaime Roderer

    Production Company: Lucky Twenty One
    Director: The Chartrands
    DP: The Chartrands and Dean Mitchell
    EP: John Gilliland

    Post: Lucky Post
    Editor: Logan Hefflefinger
    Assist Editor: John Valle
    Graphics: Seth Olson
    Sound: Scottie Richardson
    Finish: Tone Visuals @ Lucky Post
    Color: Company 3

  • 'Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips' at the Freer and Sackler Galleries

    'Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips' at the Freer and Sackler Galleries

    Wendell Phillips, a young paleontologist and geologist, headed one of the largest archaeological expeditions to remote South Arabia (present-day Yemen) from 1949 to 1951. Accompanied by some of the leading scholars, scientists, and technicians of the day, Phillips was on a quest to uncover two ancient cities — Timna, the capital of the once-prosperous Qataban kingdom, and Marib, the reputed home of the legendary Queen of Sheba — that had flourished along the fabled incense road some 2,500 years earlier.

    'Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips' at the Freer and Sackler Galleries
    Phillips stands with Yemeni men, including Sheik Al-Barhi (center), a leader of the Bal Harith tribe, and a child in the desert. Courtesy American Foundation for the Study of Man
    Exhibition Highlights

    Through a selection of unearthed objects as well as film and photography shot by the expedition team, the exhibition highlights Phillips’s key finds, recreates his adventures (and misadventures), and conveys the thrill of discovery on this important great archaeological frontier.

    'Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips' at the Freer and Sackler Galleries
    Plaque with inscription and phiale held in protruding right hand Yemen; mid-1st
    century BCE Bronze Gift of The American Foundation for the Study of Man, Wendell and Merilyn Phillips Collection, S2013.2.203
    On view will be eyewitness videos, photos, diaries and first-hand documents alongside over 80 of the most important documented collection of Yemeni artifacts outside of the country, dating from the 8th century BCE to 2nd century CE.

    The exhibition will highlight a famed pair of striding Hellenistic bronze lions surmounted by a figure of Eros, the Greek god of love. Known as the “Lions of Timna,” the skillfully cast sculptural forms — once featured on Yemeni currency — exemplify the vibrant cultural exchange between the Qataban and Greek empires, and inscriptions on its base allow researchers to reconstruct the home it came from and explore familial relationships of its affluent owners.

    'Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips' at the Freer and Sackler Galleries
    Head of a woman (known as Miriam) Yemen; mid-1st century CE Alabaster, stucco and lapis lazuli Gift of The American Foundation for the Study of Man, Wendell and Merilyn Phillips Collection, S2013.2.44
    Also featured is an iconic translucent alabaster head of a young woman, with lapis lazuli eyebrows and an Egyptian hairstyle. Unearthed in the cemetery of Timna, the head was named “Miriam” after the daughter of a member of the expedition.

    Other excavated objects featured include precious incense burners, delicately carved alabaster ibexes, finely articulated funerary sculpture, and a wealth of inscriptions that offer unprecedented insight into the life and times of the ancient people of Arabia.

    Where: The Arthur M. Sackler Gallery

    When: Oct. 11, 2014 to June 7, 2015

    Source: Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery [August 06, 2014]

  • Volkswagen up! Commercial — Tall Girl

    Volkswagen up! Commercial — Tall Girl

    In this latest ad for Volkswagen we follow a tall woman on a series of dates in her quest to find the perfect partner. The problem is that every man she meets is simply too small for her. After a number of failed dates with different men, we see her waiting for her next date. He arrives in a Volkswagen up! and our leading lady looks dejected: if he's driving that car, he's probably the shortest man of all, she thinks.
    Imagine her surprise and delight when the door opens and out steps a strapping 6'3 hunk of a man! She's finally found true love and a suitably tall companion in the most unlikely of places — the surprisingly spacious Volkswagen up!
    Credits:
    Ad Agency: Adam & Eve DDB
    Country: United Kingdom
    Director: Chris Palmer
    Executive Creative Director: Jeremy Craigen
    Art Director: Feargal Ballance
    Copywriter: patrick mcclelland
    Account Director: Jonathan Hill
    Agency Producer: Lucinda Ker

  • Audi 2013 Super Bowl Commercial "Prom" Let's You Pick The Ending

    Audi 2013 Super Bowl Commercial "Prom" Let's You Pick The Ending

    Audi's collection of 2013 Super Bowl ads with three alternative endings to "Prom Night", above "Worth it", and below "Buddies" and finally the "Tradition" spot.
    A slightly insecure teenager is unhappy about going to the Senior Prom without a date. But when his Dad lets him borrow the new Audi S6 for the night, he gains more and more confidence with every mile, arriving at the Prom a changed young man. You'll have to watch the 1st of three alternate endings to the 2013 Audi Super Bowl commercial to see if his newly found bravery pays off.

    Check out the 2nd of three alternate endings to the 2013 Audi Super Bowl commercial, where one brave young man ends the night with some unexpected company.

    The 3rd of three alternate endings to the 2013 Audi Super Bowl commercial, where one brave young man learns what it really means to be passed the Audi torch.

  • Southern Comfort Puts Our Super Cool Speedo Man On A Patio

    Southern Comfort Puts Our Super Cool Speedo Man On A Patio

    Southern Comfort is back with a new commercial, "Patio" features the coolest guy on the beach, aka Speedo Man. The second ad from the "Whatever's Comfortable" campaign again uses the song "Hit Or Miss" by Odetta and our comfortable cool dude in his now famous brown speedo being as cool as ever.

    See the spot that started it all for Speedo Man HERE.

    Credits:
    Ad Title: Southern Comfort "Whatever's Comfortable" Patio
    Ad Agency: Wieden + Kennedy New York
    Executive Creative Director: Ian Reichenthal and Scott Vitrone
    Creative Director: Scott Vitrone and Ian Reichenthal
    Head of Content Production: Lora Schulson
    Copywriter: Nick Kaplan
    Art Director: Jeff Dryer
    Producer: Alison Hill
    Head of Brand Strategy: Stuart Smith
    Digital Strategist: Marshall Ball
    Brand Strategist: Ben Alter
    Production Company: Biscuit Filmworks
    Director: Tim Godsall
    Director of Photography: Edu Grau
    Editorial Company: MacKenzie Cutler
    Editor: Gavin Cutler
    VFX Company: Suspect
    Telecine Company: CO3
    Mix Company: Heard City
    Music Supervision Company: Good Ear Music Supervision
    Song: Odetta — "Hit Or Miss"

  • Isn't it bromantic? — or Romeo, Romeo, where art thou Romeo?

    Isn't it bromantic? — or Romeo, Romeo, where art thou Romeo?

    Lion

    “Romeo, Romeo, where art thou Romeo?”

    If the modern woman uttered these lines from her balcony, you can bet your bard Romeo would not be there to hear them. In fact, the modern Romeo would most likely be at his best friend Julian’s place having a few beers while watching `the game’. Sure, it is not the traditional plot of a romance, but stories of a man and woman falling in love are of little importance to cinema audiences these days. The new niche market is man and man love stories.

    No, I’m not referring to Brokeback Mountain syndrome, rather the current cinema trend of bromantic comedies. Gone are the days when audiences would fork out their hard earned cash to see any film where Hugh Grant would stutter, twitch and be British for two hours before sweeping the girl off her feet. No longer do people turn to butter at the sight of Julia Roberts flashing her signature smile whilst wondering whether they can climb into her mouth. Instead, audiences now want their romantic comedies served with a large side of testosterone.

    Coined in the nineties, the term bromance refers to a close but non-sexual relationship between straight men. The portrayal of this form of homosocial intimacy on the big screen isn’t a new phenomenon. One only has to look at films such as Wayne’s World and Dumb and Dumber for examples of early bromantic comedies, whilst themes of bromance are evident in movies like Good Will Hunting and Clerks. However, only recently has the bromantic comedy formula emerged as a stand-alone genre.

    Why, you ask? Blame filmmaker Judd Apatow and his uber-successful films Talladega Nights: The Ballard of Ricky Bobby and Superbad which highlighted the box-office earning potential of the male love story. Initially the first two or three films were a clever twist on the formula of a tired genre; boy meets boy, boy loses boy, boy gets boy back. Yet bromantic comedies are now as frequent as Lindsay Lohan at a bottle shop.

    I guess you cannot blame Apatow for every entry into the never-ending stream of bromantic comedies. That would be like blaming George Clooney for Ocean’s Twelve, when really he was only partially responsible. Plus there have been some hilarious films under the bromantic comedy umbrella such as Pineapple Express, The Wedding Crashers and Role Models. But their entertainment value is dimmed under the sheer weight of unoriginal movies raining down.

    It is ironic that given bromantic comedies were initially a fresh take on a spent genre, their greatest problem is the same as the original genre from which they were born. After just seven years of mainstream success, already this cinema trend has become generic. All it takes to make and sell one of these films is a blossoming bromance (obviously), two semi-appealing lead actors and a few penis jokes. Done. Before you can say `dude’, males in their teens to late twenties are queued up down the block to see the latest thing they have seen before.

    The reality is that as long as the formula continues to create box-office revenue, Hollywood studios will keep pumping out bromantic comedies as often and fast as they can until audiences spontaneously self-combust under the sheer weight of onscreen homosocial intimacy. In the meantime, the success of the genre (within a genre) makes me wonder whether we will see the emergence of a bromantic comedy sub-genre. Perhaps fromantic comedies will be the next big earner. After all, who would not want to watch a love story between two people with Afros? Or perhaps toemantic comedies will take over. A price cannot be put on the entertainment value of seeing two kindred spirits’ united by their love for feet and toes in the manner to which Luis Bunuel was accustomed. It would have my ticket. Oh, what a grande take it would be on the notions of timeless romance.

    “Romeo, Romeo, where are thou Romeo?”

    Memo to Juliette: he is over at Julian’s placing playing footsy and sucking his toes.
  • Where There Is Love Any Match Can Work — Fun Ad Campaign From La Cucina Italiana

    Where There Is Love Any Match Can Work — Fun Ad Campaign From La Cucina Italiana

    From Italy comes this heart warming love story of a beautiful young couple for the Italian magazine "La Cucina Italiana" (the Italian Kitchen). The ads message is simple: "Where there is love, any match can work", La Cucina would love for us to open our pallets to the idea of a lobster dish served with potato and the message is served to us via this couple in turmoil. The woman, aka the potato feels that she is not good enough for her lover, the man, aka the lobster, our lobster man opens his heart to his lover, the potato woman and makes her understand that their love is real and strong enough to work together forever...or until someone eats them.

    But wait, there are more couples foods food dishes in crisis, below is the second commercial from the campaign, in it onion woman and yogurt man are on the verge of ending it all...

    Credits:
    Creative Ad Agency: BBDO, Milan, Italia
    Creative Directors: Federico Pepe, Stefania Siani
    Art Director: Christian Andrea Longhi
    Copywriters: Georgia Ferraro, Samantha Scaloni
    Director: Luca Lucini
    Production company: Filmini
    Music: Dadomani Studio

  • Heineken's Man Of The World Lands In The USA In "Déjà Vu" Ad

    Heineken's Man Of The World Lands In The USA In "Déjà Vu" Ad

    Follow one man's legendary journey to exotic nightclubs around the world before he finally arrives in New York City in the new Heineken "Déjà Vu" ad. Heineken's Arrive Big ad campaign launches in the USA with it's Man Of The World bringing the new taller, sleeker and starred beer bottle with him.

  • Met Museum spotlights American Indian art

    Met Museum spotlights American Indian art

    An exhibit of American Indian art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art throws the connection between art and collector into unusually sharp relief.

    A feathered basket from the early 20th century, made of plant fiber and quail feathers from Pomo, California is on display in New York in this photo provided to Reuters on January 17, 2012 by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. An exhibit of American Indian art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art throws the connection between art and collector into unusually sharp relief. The show features key pieces from The Coe Collection of American Indian Art, the life's work of a Ralph T. Coe, a collector and museum director who played a central role in reviving interest in American Indian art [Credit: Reuters/Metropolitan Museum of Art]
    The show features key pieces from The Coe Collection of American Indian Art, the life's work of a Ralph T. Coe, a collector and museum director who played a central role in reviving interest in American Indian art.

    "The exhibit honors Coe and the role he played in the acceptance and understanding of the Native American work," said Julie Jones, head of the museum's Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas.

    The show includes about 40 objects representing a wide range of materials, from stone to animal hide, as well as time, place and distinct peoples.

    Most of the Coe collection dates from the 19th to early 20th century when Native Americans came in contact with outsiders ranging from traders to missionaries to the U.S. army.

    "Coe had some particular interests, one of them being objects that have come to be called souvenir art," Jones explained.

    Souvenir art melded Native American art with European art, such as mocassins embroidered with European-like floral designs. Work from the people of the Great Plains evokes the men on horseback wearing feathers and buckskin.

    Masks and head dress ornaments, sometimes used in theatrical ceremonies and story-telling, are another aspect of the exhibit.

    An imposing sculpture of a Noble Woman by the Northwest Coast Haida artist Robert Davidson, dated to 2001, is a contemporary expression of a long tradition of carving wood. Most of the objects were made by artists who were schooled by their predecessors.

    "Traditions were handed down," Jones said.

    The man behind the collection

    Born in 1929 in Cleveland, Ohio, Coe grew up in a home with filled with works by Renoir, Pissarro, Monet and Manet, all collected by his father, a trustee of the Cleveland Museum of Art.

    "Coe came from a solidly Eurocentric point of view. He grew up in a house full of European paintings and learned to love them," Jones said.

    But a book by Miguel Covarrubias, a Mexican artist and amateur archaeologist sympathetic to tribal art, was a catalyst for Coe to turn his attention to the art of Native Americans.

    Soon after reading it, Coe bought a carved model of a totem pole, his first work of American Indian art that would eventually form part of the Coe Collection, a group of more than 1,100 objects, some dating from prehistoric times.

    He became a champion of American Indian art, a mutualism that continued for the next half-century.

    By 1962 Coe, a curator at Kansas City's Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, organized "The Imagination of Primitive Man," an exhibit designed to illuminate the creative imagination of tribal peoples.

    The most ambitious campaign Coe waged on behalf of this art resulted in "Sacred Circles: Two Thousand Years of North American Indian Art," shown in London as part of the United States Bicentennial in 1976, and in Kansas City one year later.

    Its nearly 700 objects revealed the Indian approach to nature and nature's relationship to man, myth, time and space to a public that was unfamiliar with it.

    "'Sacred Circles' changed the popular presentation of American Indian art and influenced a generation of collectors and museum professionals," Jones said.

    For his last large exhibition — "Lost and Found Traditions: Native American Art, 1965 -1985" — Coe crisscrossed North America, seeking works of art that used traditional forms and materials, but were redefined by contemporary visions.

    It marked Coe's transition from art historian to an advocate for the new, larger world of North American Indian contemporary art, and was shown in several museums in 1986.

    Author: Ellen Freilich | Source: Reuters [January 17, 2012]

  • Troy Polamalu Is The Piano Man for Head & Shoulders Ad

    Troy Polamalu Is The Piano Man for Head & Shoulders Ad

    Troy Polamalu is the piano man in Head & Shoulders newest commercial entitled "Virtuoso." Watch as Troy digs deep into his being to discuss his love of classical music and Head & Shoulders Deep Clean. While he tickles the ivories, we all learn a little something about how deep a man can really be.

    Credits:

    Advertising Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi, USA
    Chief Creative Officer: Con Williamson
    Creative Director/Copywriter: Neil Levin
    Creative Director/Art Director: Michael Vaughan
    Executive Producer: Gregory Hall
    Production Company: Harvest Films
    Director: The Hoffman Brothers

    Director of Photography: Stefan Czapsky
    Executive Producer: Rob Sexton
    Line Producer: Francie Moore
    Editing House: Cosmo Street
    Editor:Craig Deardoff
    Producer: Jen Parik
    Executive: ProducerMaura Woodward
    Visual Effects Company: 3 NY NY
    VFX Flame Artist/Creative Director: Randie Swanberg
    Executive Producer: Angela Lupo
    Producer: Matthew Engele