Antony Hoffman of Joinery directed this Super Bowl spot for WeatherTech in which a special operations team gives comprehensive protection to a vehicle.
Q Department turned out original music and sound design for the piece which came out of agency Pinnacle Advertising.
Credits
Client WeatherTech Agency Pinnacle Advertising, Chicago Steve Bougdanos, Mike Priebe, creative directors; Lisa Berg, producer. Production Joinery Antony Hoffman, director. Editorial Cutters Chris Moore, editor Music/Sound Q Department, New York original music & sound design Audio Post Another Country, Chicago Erik Widmark, mixer; Brett Rossiter, assistant mixer
Violence against women is rooted in gender and relationship models based on control and emotional dependence: this is the starting point for the development of the awareness-raising campaign โGetting Ready,โ ideated for Sephora Italia by creative agency LePub and directed by Juul Op den Kamp.
Psychological violence manifests itself through constant and repeated behaviors aimed at controlling and subduing the partner. When we talk about gender-based violence, the focus is often on the physical side. However, not enough is said about the first signs of abusive behavior, especially from a psychological point of view, which are mostly subtle.
The objective of LePub and Sephora Italiaโs โGetting Readyโ campaign is deliberately simple and direct: to encourage awareness of what are called โEarly Signs,โ being the first signals of gender-based violence. Taking care of oneโs outward appearance, the way one dresses and wears make-up, are powerful means of expressing oneโs identity and are often the subject of abusive controlling behavior. Sephora believes in the right of every woman to be able to express herself freely and has once again decided to turn the spotlight on this issue through a campaign with a strong emotional impact.
โThe topic addressed in this campaign is a sensitive one, unfortunately of a tragic relevance that cannot leave us indifferent. Signs of violence must be scrupulously observed, properly recognized and promptly interrupted. It starts with a comment, continues with an insult and finally culminates in a concrete act, a dramatic phenomenon that we are forced to read about every day in our newspapers. This is why it is absolutely necessary to act and talk about it: if our message reaches and supports even one... Read More