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10 Best Product Placements in Movies

10 Best Product Placements in Movies

Christopher Campbell
By Christopher Campbell posted 1 year ago
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Product placement in movies is now so overdone that we may not even notice it unless a particular film or TV show really hits us over the head with a blatant in-your-face product shot. Otherwise, seeing commercial goods everywhere merely seems like everyday life in capitalist America. Just look at any of the websites that tally up products spotlighted in mainstream movies and you’ll probably be surprised (though not shocked) at how many brands appear in each new release. Did you notice that Blades of Glory contains 38 separate products? Probably not. Many of those products couldn’t have gotten their money’s worth, because the movie doesn’t allow the audience to walk away recalling any one particular item.

At a time when TV’s Top Chef and 30 Rock show us how lame blatantly whorish and ironic product placement can get, and while moviegoers are being subjected to more subliminal, suggestive and unintentional advertisements (Speed Racer, Wall-E and Beverly Hills Chihuahua respectively have us thinking about McDonalds, Apple products and Taco Bell, though some of these associations are not necessarily the movie’s fault), it’s good to remember that not all product placement is superfluous or despicable. Some of it is actually funny, smart and beneficial to mankind.

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SXSW Preview: Blip Festival: Reformat the Planet

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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BLIP FESTIVAL: REFORMAT THE PLANET trailer from 2 Player Productions on Vimeo.

In his first feature doc, Paul Owens looks into ChipTunes, a new underground electronic music genre consisting of music made on out-of-date video game hardware. Blip Festival: Reformat the Planet, screening on the 24 Beats Per Minute program, premieres on Saturday night at the Dobie. The trailer’s above, and Paul Owens answers our questions below.

Tell us about your movie. Who did you work with, why did you make it? Give us the reductive, 25-word or less, “It’s like [pop culture reference a] meets [pop culture reference b]!” pitch, then explain what the quick and dirty sell leaves out.

Blip Festival: Reformat the Planet delves into this music movement known as ChipTunes, which is based around using forgotten videogame hardware (nintendo, atari, gameboy) to create new, original music.

I made the movie with Asif Siddiky, who did the cinematography, and Paul Levering, who was the producer. In the beginning, we checked out a live chiptune show and we were all blown away. We’d never seen or heard anything like it, but because it was sort of anchored to this classic videogame sound, it instantly struck a chord with us. Slowly we accumulated live footage, interviews, important moments in the scene and two years later, we had a documentary.
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