Steve Keenan
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The BA advert from
1989....
...and the Silverjet remake,
2007
plus The making of the Silverjet film
In a cheeky take-off of an iconic British Airways advert from 1989, start-up airline Silverjet has reshot the film in the same place and with the same director.
Hugh Hudson, who directed Chariots of Fire in 1981, went on to shoot the BA advert eight years later. In it, 150 swimmers in red swimsuits are seen, followed by hundreds of people dressed in blue walking through Los Angeles and hundreds more in white in a field.
The huge crowd of extras come together to form a face in the desert, with music overriding the message: "The World's favourtie airline".
Now Silverjet has spent nearly £100,000 hiring the same ad agency, Saatchi, together with Hudson to reform after 18 years to film a remake. Hudson said the idea appealed to him as a "David v Goliath" project. The crew spent seven weeks remaking the film in LA and at Lake Powell, bordering Arizona and Utah.
The plot and buildup are identical, but with a single red suited swimmer and lone suit in LA. Instead of hundreds and thousands of extras, only four people form the face, with a handful of other actors posing as passengers and crew.
Silverjet chief executive Lawrence Hunt said: "We wanted something that would stretch our budget, that would be recognisable rather than completely new.
"I think it is the most iconic airline advert ever - I think BA used to produce fantastic adverts. But I also wanted to show us as something more personal, more different to BA and the traditional carriers. I think this gets the message across of being a private airline service, rather than one for the masses."
The ad first shows at 1.55pm this Saturday during the England/Australia Rugby World Cup Quarter Finals and will then run globally.
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There is indeed much confusion about this ad. Most people I know just assume that it is a BA ad, such is the power of the original imagery and music.
My main point though is to do with copyright - after all, the ad does seem like a straight copy. Does anyone know what the legal position is on this?
Clive Mc, London, UK
And I thought it was a BA ad.
Arnold Ward, Weybridge, Surrey, UK
Is this part of a competition within the self indulgent, self centred luvvie world of advertising for a prize for some smug pomposity?
What a load of nothing!
And why on earth can anyone justify 7 weeks in making it?
Roger Carr, Royston,
It made me laugh. I think the reason there are only four in the Silverjet ad is that the other 996 extras all flew on BA and are still waiting for the baggage.
martin george, london,
As others have said, consumers now will just hear and see it and assume it's for BA thus increasing their awareness. It's an industry in joke, non ad literate consumers approaching 40 wouldn't even be expected to remember the original and thus any intended communication for silverjet has failed. It seems the agency has simply found a gullible and greedy tiny client to sponsor their grudge against a previous client.
Daniel, Aukland, New Zealand
If it wasnt for articles like this , who outside the industry would get this message. Articles like this are the reason we have ads like this. The "news"papers doing the PRs work for them.
paul, brom, uk
Might be a bit too clever though. People will hear the music, wtach the beginning and assume it is British Airways. Of course they will see Silverjet at the end, but I think they it will always be associated with Bristish Airways and people will remember that - and some airline that made a copy!
David Grant, Belfast,
Brilliant way to show the exclusivity of Silverjet, bringing 'a select few people together'. IS, who made the commercial, are part of M&C Saatchi, who made the original for BA. Clever stuff.
Andrew Bruck, London, UK