Category: Advertising Typography
Advertiser: WARNER BROS CANADA
Product/Service: CONTAGION
Agency: LOWE ROCHE
Creative Director: Steph Mackie (Lowe Roche)
Creative Director: Mark Biernacki (Lowe Roche)
Art Director: Glen D'Souza (Lowe Roche)
Writer: Michael Takasaki (Lowe Roche)
Producer: Beth Mackinnon (Lowe Rochel)
Producer: Terri Vegso (Lowe Roche)
Contributing Artist: Dr Patrick Hickey (Curb Media)
Typography: Glen D'souza (Lowe Roche)
Media placement: Billboard - Empty Storefront Window, Queen St., Toronto - August 31, 2011 / 1 Week
Media placement: Online Video - YouTube - September 7, 2011
Describe the brief from the client
To promote the movie 'Contagion', our goal was to create an outdoor execution on a $15,000 budget that would create impressions on more that just the people passing by. We needed to create an ad that had built-in talk and sharing value.
Describe the challenges and key objectives
We needed to create an ad that had built-in talk and sharing value.
Describe how you arrived at the final design
We built giant Petri dishes, inoculated them with fungi and bacteria, and mounted them in store-front windows. Over the course of several days, the microbes grew from being nearly invisible to eerily spelling the name of the film. This is the first time an out-of-home execution has been created entirely out of living microbes. In order to accomplish this, we consulted with microbiologists and immunologists from several countries in order to select microbes that could flourish in our environment without posing any health risk whatsoever.
Give some indication of how successful the outcome was in the market
Contagion won its opening weekend, taking in 3 times its closest competitor at the box office. Within 1 week of the video’s release, it had registered millions of impressions, including over 210,000 views on YouTube (now over 500,000) and coverage by the CBC Toronto News at 5:30, the Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Today Show, The National Post, the Montreal Gazette, the Ottawa Citizen, Fast Company, the Huffington Post and Science Magazine, among others. It has been shared on Facebook over 41,300 times and been the subject of over 2,400 tweets.