Miller's Gucci Guilty and Scorsese's Chanel Bleu
Strange highs and strange lows
A few days ago a commercial for Gucci shot by Frank Miller (The Spirit) and featuring Evan Rachel Wood and Chris Evans with a cover of Depeche Mode's "Strangelove" by Friendly Fires (full song to the right) made the rounds and pretty much proved Miller is a one note filmmaker, all style, no substance and if it isn't black-and-white with splashes of muted color he wasn't interested. Admittedly, it's stylish stuff, but as The Spirit proved there isn't much else to him… at least not that we've seen so far.
Today a commercial shot by Martin Scorsese and featuring Gaspard Ulliel (Hannibal Rising) for Chanel's "Bleu" arrives to offer a comparison. I don't know about you, but I get a certain 8 1/2 vibe from this one as Ulliel plays a filmmaker recalling a past love during a press conference. I love the last line and the rather in-your-face metaphor, but it's a commercial
Of course, commercials are supposed to be stylish and eye-catching, and from that perspective Miller's works fine, but if you were to examine these two commercials and make a judgment on which one of the directors will be going farther I would suspect most of us will come up with the same answer.
Thanks to The Playlist for the heads up.
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Well, here's the thing… Scorsese has 1:01 to work with where Miller has half that time. I know we're talking commercials here; however I think a comparison is somewhat irrelevant. If you were to throw me in the middle of Scorsese's commercial without knowing who the director was, I would almost be inclined to compare it to they style of Michael Bay. Is that good, or bad?
Where can i download a copy of this please ??? :)
… Strangelove by Friendly Fires, I mean ;)
Much like a lot of Scorsese's work the commercial is very meh… and overrated.