BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 54 definitions for Evolution.

Evolution (Dove)

Print-Friendly
About 10 pages (3,008 words)

Bookmark and Share Questions on this topic? Just ask!
Evolution

Promotional image for Evolution
Client: Unilever
Product: Dove Campaign for Real Beauty
Agency: Ogilvy & Mather (Toronto)
Directed by Yael Staav
Production company: Reginald Pike
Starring Stephanie Betts
Music by The Flashbulb ("Passage D")
Release date(s) October 6, 2006 (2006-10-06)
(online)
Running time 75 seconds
Country Canada
Language English
French
Budget C$50,000
Preceded by Daughters
Followed by Onslaught
Official website

Evolution is an award-winning advertising campaign launched by Unilever in 2006 as part of its Dove Campaign for Real Beauty, to promote the newly-created Dove Self-Esteem Fund. The centre of the Unilever campaign is a 75-second spot produced by Ogilvy & Mather in Toronto, Canada. The piece was first displayed online on 6 October 2006,[1] and was later broadcast as a television and cinema spot in the Netherlands and the Middle East. The ad was created from the budget left over from the earlier Daughters campaign, and was intended to be the first in a series of such online-focused spots by the company. Later pieces include Onslaught and Amy. Evolution was directed by Canadian director Yael Staav, with sound design handled by the Vapor Music Group, and post-production by SoHo. The advert was a critical, popular, and financial success. It won a number of the most prestigious awards in the advertising industry, including two Cannes Lions Grand Prix awards and an Epica D'Or. It has been discussed in many mainstream television programmes and print publications, and the exposure generated by the spot has been estimated at a value of over $150M. Evolution has also spawned numerous unofficial copycat versions, including a title sequence to a BBC sketch show and a short parody by a British production company which has gone on to itself be nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award.

Contents

Sequence

The advert opens with a "pretty, but ordinary girl" (Stephanie Betts)[2] entering and sitting down in a studio.[3] Two harsh lights are switched on and the first bars of The Flashbulb's "Passage D", a drill 'n' bass piece with piano accompaniment, are heard. The short credits sequence provides the title of the film and credit to Dove. The camera then switches to a time lapse sequence, showing a team of people adding make-up and adjusting the hair of the woman, transforming her into a "strikingly beautiful billboard model."[3] When the final physical adjustments have been made, the team move off-camera and a series of camera flashes begins as the photographer takes shots of the woman in various poses. One shot is selected from the batch and moved into a generic image editing software interface, where a series of "Photoshopping" adjustments are made to further alter the appearance of the model, including lengthening the neck, adjusting the curve of the shoulder, altering the hair and skin, and enlarging the eyes and mouth. The final image is transferred to a billboard advertisement for the fictional Fasel brand of foundation makeup, and the piece fades to the statement "No wonder our perception of beauty is distorted", ending with an invitation to take part in "Dove Real Beauty Workshops" and the logo for the Dove Self-Esteem Fund.

Production

Evolution was one of a series of short films (entitled "Beauty Crackdown")[4] pitched to Unilever as an "activation idea" to promote the Campaign for Real Beauty online.[5] The concept was pushed by art director Tim Piper, who proposed to create the piece with the budget left over from the earlier Daughters spot. It was originally intended to get people to the Campaign for Real Beauty website to see Daughters, and to participate in the workshops featured on the site.[4] The team brought together for the ad included director Yael Staav, the first female director to win a Cannes Lion (for Hugging, a campaign for the ALS Society of Canada),[6] fashion photographers Tiko Poulakakis and Gabor Jurina, Tim Piper, and Piper's girlfriend Stephanie Betts as the model. Betts, a cartoonist, was chosen as the model for Evolution in part because Piper was first inspired to write the piece after seeing the amount of time she spent applying make-up,[7] and felt that she would be an ideal "representation of the norm", highlighting the extreme changes that models undergo in the fashion industry.[5] She was originally dubious about taking on the role, but later stated that she was proud that she joined the campaign.[2] The shoot took place over a single day, and over two-and-a-half hours of footage was taken for the make-up portion of the piece. This was eventually condensed to 23 seconds in the final cut. The stage was set up in a manner identical to that of modern fashion shoots, with the lighting and camera positioned to remove any shadows from the model's face to aid post-production retouching. Sound design took three weeks, and was split into two sections. Fifteen hours were spent creating several mixes of "Passage D", each tested and discarded before the version used in the final cut was settled upon. A further nine hours were spent adding in the various background noises to the piece, including sped-up human voices, a starter pistol and galloping racehorses.[5] Post-production at SoHo was originally planned to take around three days, but was extended to two weeks.[4] Gabor Jurina, the photographer responsible for the digital retouching of the photographs taken during the shoot, supplied the post-production team with 118 digital stills of the intermediate stages of the transformation from the "real" photograph to the final image shown on the billboard. These were re-cut and assembled to create the functions shown in the "Photoshopping" sequence, such as stretching the neck and adjusting the size of certain facial features. Other post-production work included stabilising the head in the centre of the shot during the make-up sequence, covering certain continuity errors, creating and compositing the billboard advertisement, and constructing a fake image-editing interface.[5]

Release and reception

Evolution was incorporated into the Canadian Campaign for Real Beauty website on 6 October 2006 in order to coincide with the start of the Los Angeles Fashion Week,[8] and was uploaded by art director Tim Piper to video sharing website YouTube shortly after. While it has remained a largely internet-based campaign, Evolution has appeared as a television commercial in the Netherlands and the Middle East, with other appearances planned.[9] The advert was a startling success online and was viewed over 40,000 times in its first day,[10] 1,700,000 times within a month of its upload,[1] and 12,000,000 times within its first year.[11] Even without having appeared offline, the advert was discussed by a number of mainstream television programmes, including Good Morning America, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and The View, and news networks such as CNN, NBC, and ABC News, with the overwhelming majorty coming out in support of the campaign's message. Spaces at the mother and daughter workshops sold out almost immediately,[10] and the total exposure generated through the $50,000 piece was estimated by Ogilvy & Mather in October 2006 as being worth around $150M.[12] Comparisons have often been drawn up between the campaign and Dove's earlier purchase of a 75-second spot for Daughters during the Super Bowl XL. The Super Bowl spot cost an estimated $2.5M, reached an audience of 500 million, and generated only one third of the boost in traffic to the Campaign for Real Beauty website of Evolution.[1][13] Evolution was particularly popular with critics within the advertising industry, and has garnered a number of awards since its debut in October 2006. It was the favourite in the run up to the Cannes Lions to win the festival's Grand Prix in the Cyber category,[14] generally considered one of the most prestigious awards in the industry. Ultimately, the prize went to three entries: Nike+, advertising the Nike brand, Heidies 15 MB of Fame, promoting fashion company Diesel S.p.A.'s website and products, and Evolution.[3] Evolution also went on to win the Grand Prix in the Film category,[15] beating I Feel Pretty from Nike, Inc., Paint for Sony's BRAVIA line of high-definition television sets, and The Power of Wind for the Wind Energy Initiative. The victory attracted a certain amount of controversy, as the jury switched Evolution from the "Fundraising & Appeals" category, whose entries are ineligible to win the Grand Prix, to the "Corporate Image" category at the last minute.[9] Chairman of the jury Bob Scarpelli said of the decision "We moved it into another category because we felt that strongly about it. We were not trying to break rules or set precedents, we just went with our hearts and minds, and asked the festival if we could move it."[9] As a result of the win, Evolution became the first entry in the festival's history to take home Grand Prix awards from two categories.[12][16] The piece went on to win a number of other awards, including a silver Clio Award (in the Toiletries/Pharmaceuticals category),[17] the Film Grand Prix and two Gold prizes at the London International Awards,[18], an Epica D'Or and Gold Prize in the Interactive category of the Epica Awards,[19] among others.[20]

Legacy

The popularity of Evolution and its prescence on many video-sharing websites led inevitably to a large number of copycats and parodies being uploaded by the public. In under six months, parodies on YouTube alone received over 5 million hits between them,[21] and ranged from pumpkin carving[22] to creating a drag artist.[23] Of these, by far the most successful was a professionally-made piece entitled Slob Evolution.

Slob Evolution

Slob Evolution's promotional image, a parody of the original Evolution version shown above
Slob Evolution's promotional image, a parody of the original Evolution version shown above

Slob Evolution is an Emmy Award-nominated short film created as a parody of the original Evolution spot in late 2006. The piece was directed by Simon Willows, known for his work on the Volvic mineral water television and cinema commercials, and was produced on a budget of £2000 by production company Blink Productions. Post-production work was done by Framestore CFC. In Slob Evolution, the role of the model is taken by a teenaged boy who, instead of having make-up applied in the time-lapse sequence, is given fast food, alcoholic beverages, and cigarettes, transforming over the course of thirty seconds into an overweight middle-aged slob. Further adjustments are made in a similar image-editing interface used in Evolution, with the subject's neck shortened, features made more asymmetric, and a tattoo added. The image is transferred to a billboard advertisement for the fictional Lardo brand of "man cream", before fading to the statement "Thank God our perception of reality is distorted. No one wants to look at ugly people." and the web address "www.campaignagainstreallife.com". Blink Productions described their reasons for creating the parody as "firstly to promote the presence of Blink Productions, a traditional commercials production company, to the online community. Secondly, to prove that a relevant and great piece of content needs no money spent on seeding. Proving itself to be a true 'viral'."[24] The parody was uploaded to video-sharing website YouTube on December 4 2006 and was promoted only through a seeding of 30 e-mails.[25] Within its first month, Slob Evolution was viewed over 278,000 times,[26] and has since climbed to 1 million. The parody went on to be nominated for a number of prestigious awards, including the "Comedy: Short Form" and "Viral" categories of the 2007 Webby Awards,[27] and in the "Outstanding Broadband Comedy" category of the 2007 Daytime Emmy Awards.[28] The popular and critical attention that Blink Productions received for Slob Evolution led to Tiger Aspect, the production company behind the 2007 BBC comedy sketch show Ruddy Hell! It's Harry and Paul contacting the production company to produce an introduction to the show in a similar vein.

Title card for Ruddy Hell! It's Harry and Paul, showing the familiar billboard
Title card for Ruddy Hell! It's Harry and Paul, showing the familiar billboard

The title sequence to Ruddy Hell! It's Harry and Paul begins with a further adaptation of "Passage D" (with much of the drill 'n' bass section removed) playing as the screen fades in to Morwenna Banks and Laura Solon. The familiar time-lapse sequence shows the pair being given several pints of lager, cigarettes, and fast food. Their hair is cut and their make-up removed as they slowly morph into Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse. After bras are removed from the pair's shirts, the camera zooms out to show a billboard advertisement similar to that in Slob Evolution, with the show's title displayed underneath.

Other works

Following the huge level of interest in Evolution, post-production company SoHo released a five-minute making-of documentary, which includes interviews with creative directors Janet Kestin and Tim Piper, photographer Gabor Jurina, post-production director Paul Gowan, digital artists Kevin Gibson and Terry Rose, and sound designer Andrew Harris, who discuss the various stages of the post-production process behind the creation of the spot. The making-of also includes a shot of Evolution's storyboard and a short segment of behind-the-scenes footage from the shoot itself, showing Stephanie Betts before and after the make-up process. After the debut of Evolution, Dove quickly ordered several follow-up online advertisements, the first two of which (Onslaught and Amy) appeared online in October 2007. The pair are predicted to prove at least as popular as Evolution.[11] Other companies have attempted to use the same formula, with mixed results. Among the more-commented on campaigns is Beauty is..., launched by Nivea in 2007 and comprising television, print, and online segments which push the same message as the Dove campaign.[11]

References

  1. ^ a b c "'Dove Evolution' Goes Viral, with Triple the Traffic of Super Bowl Spot", Marketing Vox, October 31 2006. Retrieved December 8 2007.
  2. ^ a b "Dove: The Evolution Of Beauty", NBC 10, December 21 2006. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  3. ^ a b c Cannes Lions Grand Prix Winner (Cyber), Cannes Lions (2007). Retrieved December 15 2007.
  4. ^ a b c McKenzie, B; "The Evolution of Evolution (interview with Tim Piper and Janet Keston), ihaveanidea.org. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  5. ^ a b c d "Making Of: Evolution", Rogue Editorial. Retrieved December 8 2007.
  6. ^ Clarke, C; "The reluctant extrovert (interview with Yael Staav)", Boards, Brunico Communications Ltd, June 1 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  7. ^ Mudhar R; "Dove's Evolution ad wins at Cannes", Toronto Star, June 22 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007
  8. ^ New Dove Film Shows How 'Ordinary' Models Are Transformed, Good Morning America, October 12 2006. Retrieved December 16 2007
  9. ^ a b c ""Evolution" reigns for Film at Cannes", Boards, Brunico Communications Ltd, June 20 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  10. ^ a b "Dove", The One Show. Retrieved December 15 2007
  11. ^ a b c Simms J; Real or insincere?, Brand Republic, October 16 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  12. ^ a b Pols I; "Dove - Evolution", Ogilvy & Mather weblog, October 11 2006. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  13. ^ Neff J; "Better ROI From YouTube Video Than Super Bowl Spot, Advertising Age, October 29 2006. Retrieved December 15 2007
  14. ^ Garfield, B; Garfield's Cannes Grand Prix Prediction: Dove 'Evolution', June 11 2007. Retrieved December 8 2007.
  15. ^ Cannes Lions Grand Prix Winner (Film), Cannes Lions (2007). Retrieved December 15 2007.
  16. ^ High K; Morrissey B; Parpis E; "Cannes: The 'Evolution' of Advertising", AdWeek, June 23 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  17. ^ Clio Award Winners in the Television & Film Category (Silver), Clio Awards (2007). Retrieved December 15 2007
  18. ^ List of Winners (2007), London International Awards. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  19. ^ Epica Awards Winners (2006), Epica Awards. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  20. ^ Evolution summary, AdForum. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  21. ^ Penenberg, A L; What Happens When You Let Go, Media Magazine, May 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  22. ^ "closetgeek", Dove Evolution Parody - Pumpkin Evolution, October 30 2006. Retrieved December 15 2007
  23. ^ "Hodgson and Moffat"; Revolution, November 6 2006. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  24. ^ Slob Evolutions blurb, Blink Productions (at Funnyordie.com). Retrieved December 15 2007.
  25. ^ Jones C; Digital Newsletter (November 2007), Blink Productions. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  26. ^ Brands embrace viral video, HotHouse Interactive, 18 January 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.
  27. ^ 11th Annual Webby Awards Nominees & Winners, Webby Awards. Retrieved December 15 2007
  28. ^ Daly C; "Nominees for the Emmy Award for Broadband announced", Daytime Emmy Awards, May 31 2007. Retrieved December 15 2007.

External links

Wikinews
Wikinews has related news:
  • Dove's Real Beauty looks at photoshoot techniques in commercial
  • Dove ad viewed more than 3 million times on YouTube
Preceded by
noitulovE (Guinness)
Cannes Lions Film Grand Prix Winner
2007
Incumbent

View More Summaries on Evolution (Dove)
 
Ask any question on Evolution (Dove) and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
Evolution (Dove) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy