Spurlock: Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Supersize Me director and star, Morgan Spurlock, is out with a new documentary, this time focusing on the not-so-subtle techniques of advertisers. To further show how awkward product placements make their way into movies, television, and music videos, he spends a great deal of the movie trying to secure sponsorship for his own. That’s why the title is POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold.
Critics are already divided on the film, released in limited theaters, April 22. Some find it informative and engaging, while others find Spurlock’s tactics an ironic “sell out.” The tagline insists, “He’s not selling out, he’s buying in.” If the one note joke seems mild for a documentary, it’s because his priorities changed since having a child. He’s not trying to wage war, just to make a point about the inundation of advertising in our culture.
But one of the more critical write-ups expressed that this kind of point was made in under two minutes when Wayne and Garth from Wayne’s Wolrd mocked the necessity of product endorsements while displaying various brands. Adam Sandler films feature this spoof as an ongoing joke. Comedy TV shows like 30 Rock bring it up from time to time, like when production for a movie stopped due to no state tax breaks, but resumed when the rewritten script slipped in positive endorsements for the state. Ofcourse it went in an absurdly funny direction when the endorsements were anything but subtle.
What are your thoughts on the new documentary? What is it you would like to see in a documentary of this nature? Please enjoy this humorous brief history of product placements in movies and 20-30 second ad gag from 30 Rock. You can also see the trailer for The Greatest Movie Ever Sold below.
~Health Freedoms
New Morgan Spurlock Film Takes You Through The Product Placement Process
We had the chance to sit in a comfy chair in a Sony screening room yesterday evening to watch Morgan Spurlock‘s new documentary Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold. The definition of “meta” (literally), the movie is a step-by-step account of Spurlock’s attempts to get sponsorship and product placement deals for this movie. Spurlock navigates the contracts, branding, and negotiating that have become common in modern movie-making. And while the film’s poster makes the declarative statement “He’s not selling out, he’s buying in,” it’s actually posed in the movie as a question.
You would expect that the guy behind Super Size Me would use the movie to assail marketers and the marketing industry. And while the idea for the movie may have come from a negative experience, the movie just presents the information and leaves the opinion-making largely to the viewer. For the most part, Spurlock is asking advice from all sorts of people — OutKast’s Big Boi, MIT professor emeritus of linguistics Noam Chomsky, LCO founder Michael Levine, and kbs+p founder Richard Kirschenbaum among them — about what he should do to secure the sponsors that he’ll need to make the movie.
For sponsors — Pom Wonderful, Hyatt, and Jet Blue among them — it meant a mention (if not a full-on commercial) in the film and a certain amount of say in how the brand is portrayed. He also made guarantees on the number of screens the film would be shown on and the media impressions it would get. Sound familiar?
If Super Size Me was a marathon of eating, this is a marathon of pitching. By and large, the brands that chose to partner with the film (and there were many who declined, some, like fashion label Guess, who did so harshly) knew they were taking a bit of a chance with Spurlock. But a couple of times, it’s said that brands have to be willing to take a risk every now and again. And Lynda Resnick, owner and CEO of POM Wonderful, liked the transparency of showing the public this product placement process. “You’re going to see the whole thing play out,” she says. Are some marketers shown to be a wee bit blech? Sure. But it’s not a red mark across the entire profession.
So on a scale of one to five, PRNewser gives the movie a four. For some who are new to the industry, it will provide a little insight into the process. For those who are already familiar, it’ll be interesting to see your work play out on screen for others to digest.
If you recall, Spurlock held an eBay auction for the naming rights on his TED conference (EMC won that one). He talks about some of the issues from the movie in the video here. He also passes judgment on yesterday’s McDonald’s hiring day (“a publicity stunt”) in an interview with the BBC.
By Tonya Garcia
Sources:
http://www.mediabistro.com/prnewser/new-morgan-spurlock-film-takes-you-through-the-product-placement-process_b19486
http://norristown.patch.com/articles/spurlock-sells-out-with-the-greatest-movie-ever-sold-2
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/03/morgan-spurlock-greatest-movie-ever-sold_n_830831.html
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This is a good example of why criticism can be so useless and distracting. Granted, this concept may not be as earth shaking as “Super-Size Me,” but Morgan Spurlock has just done an enormous amount of work to make a point that needs to be made. Indeed, it asks to be made over and over and over again until we have not one “Tostitos Bowl” or “Dunkin Donuts Arena” left. The fact that tv shows have made jibes (and very funny ones) about this does in no way preclude the utility of a movie about the same. Also, I cannot think of any other movie that displays the process of seeking endorsements explicitly. That is at least interesting, if again, not earth shattering. Spurlock’s publicity tour for the movie was also quite funny and inventive, in which he decked out a goat and a Mini Cooper nascar style, and awkwardly visited talk shows with an unruly goat. The obvious inappropriateness of using a goat as a billboard was a perfect lampooning of the limitless capacity of corporations to co-opt every kind of space to paint a sign on.
If you are going to go to all the work of writing an article about a movie, why don’t you choose one WORTH WRITING ABOUT!!!!!!!!!!
For example– “ATLAS SHRUGGED” would have been an excellent choice.
Hi Mike, we might just do that, thanks!