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No. 5 the Film

No. 5 the Film (2004) is a 180-second short film directed by Baz Luhrmann (Romeo + Juliet, Moulin Rouge!) and starring Nicole Kidman and Rodrigo Santoro. Karl Lagerfeld designed the costumes;[1] he also briefly appears in the film. It is part of a new breed of advertising crossover films known as branded content. It had a budget of US$33 million, financed exclusively by Chanel. Visually captivating, the film is an extended television commercial for Chanel No. 5 perfume. The film was initially screened in many North American cinemas during the "Coming Attractions" section preceding the main feature. During the 2006 Christmas season, an edited 30-second TV spot was shown on primetime on many networks in Canada and the United States. Kidman was paid $3 million for her role in the advertisement.[2]

No. 5 the Film
Directed byBaz Luhrmann
Starring
CinematographyMandy Walker
Edited byDaniel Schwarze
Music byClaude Debussy (arranged by Craig Armstrong)
Production
companies
Distributed byChanel
Release date
20 November 2004 (UK)
Running time
180 secs
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
BudgetUS$33 million

Runtime edit

The original version after preliminary editing came to around 360 seconds, but this was later edited to a more manageable 180 seconds, including 60 seconds of credits, for television broadcast and cinema advertisement. Further cutting has led to subsequent 90-second (as seen in the UK) and 30-second (seen mostly in the U.S. and Canada) versions of the advert, shown after the first runs of the advert.

Plot edit

A famous celebrity (Nicole Kidman) runs away in a pink dress in the middle of Times Square in New York City, only to get into a cab with the one man who does not know who she is, a plot line similar to Roman Holiday.[3] After four days in his Lower East Side apartment, her secretary (Lagerfeld) commands her to return to her life as a celebrity.[4] The paparazzi take pictures of her as she walks up stairs, and she looks at big letters, a graphical device often used in Luhrmann's Red Curtain Trilogy, on top of a building that read "Coco Chanel" with her lover standing next to them. They smile at each other and then the credits are shown.

Music edit

The main musical theme of the film is Claude Debussy's "Clair de lune", arranged by Craig Armstrong and performed by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.

Sequel edit

In 2014 Baz Luhrmann created a sequel film titled Chanel No. 5: The One That I Want. The film stars model Gisele Bündchen and actor Michiel Huisman.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "£18m buys two minutes of Nicole Kidman" by Jane Martinson, The Guardian, 22 November 2004
  2. ^ "The most expensice TV adverts ever made" 2017-08-12 at the Wayback Machine by Andrew Partridge, RedC Marketing, 6 February 2015
  3. ^ a b "A Conversation with Baz Luhrmann on Chanel No. 5's The One That I Want" by Sunhee Grinnell, Vanity Fair, 15 October 2014
  4. ^ "Every second counts in $42m three-minute 'film'" by Charlotte Edwards, The Sydney Morning Herald, 22 November 2004

External links edit

  • No. 5 the Film, without credits (2:02 on YouTube
  • No. 5 the Film, with credits (3:01) on YouTube
  • Chanel. 5: The One That I Want (3:16) on YouTube

film, 2004, second, short, film, directed, luhrmann, romeo, juliet, moulin, rouge, starring, nicole, kidman, rodrigo, santoro, karl, lagerfeld, designed, costumes, also, briefly, appears, film, part, breed, advertising, crossover, films, known, branded, conten. No 5 the Film 2004 is a 180 second short film directed by Baz Luhrmann Romeo Juliet Moulin Rouge and starring Nicole Kidman and Rodrigo Santoro Karl Lagerfeld designed the costumes 1 he also briefly appears in the film It is part of a new breed of advertising crossover films known as branded content It had a budget of US 33 million financed exclusively by Chanel Visually captivating the film is an extended television commercial for Chanel No 5 perfume The film was initially screened in many North American cinemas during the Coming Attractions section preceding the main feature During the 2006 Christmas season an edited 30 second TV spot was shown on primetime on many networks in Canada and the United States Kidman was paid 3 million for her role in the advertisement 2 No 5 the FilmDirected byBaz LuhrmannStarringNicole KidmanRodrigo SantoroCinematographyMandy WalkerEdited byDaniel SchwarzeMusic byClaude Debussy arranged by Craig Armstrong ProductioncompaniesChanelBazmark fr Distributed byChanelRelease date20 November 2004 UK Running time180 secsCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudgetUS 33 million Contents 1 Runtime 2 Plot 3 Music 4 Sequel 5 References 6 External linksRuntime editThe original version after preliminary editing came to around 360 seconds but this was later edited to a more manageable 180 seconds including 60 seconds of credits for television broadcast and cinema advertisement Further cutting has led to subsequent 90 second as seen in the UK and 30 second seen mostly in the U S and Canada versions of the advert shown after the first runs of the advert Plot editA famous celebrity Nicole Kidman runs away in a pink dress in the middle of Times Square in New York City only to get into a cab with the one man who does not know who she is a plot line similar to Roman Holiday 3 After four days in his Lower East Side apartment her secretary Lagerfeld commands her to return to her life as a celebrity 4 The paparazzi take pictures of her as she walks up stairs and she looks at big letters a graphical device often used in Luhrmann s Red Curtain Trilogy on top of a building that read Coco Chanel with her lover standing next to them They smile at each other and then the credits are shown Music editThe main musical theme of the film is Claude Debussy s Clair de lune arranged by Craig Armstrong and performed by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra Sequel editIn 2014 Baz Luhrmann created a sequel film titled Chanel No 5 The One That I Want The film stars model Gisele Bundchen and actor Michiel Huisman 3 References edit 18m buys two minutes of Nicole Kidman by Jane Martinson The Guardian 22 November 2004 The most expensice TV adverts ever made Archived 2017 08 12 at the Wayback Machine by Andrew Partridge RedC Marketing 6 February 2015 a b A Conversation with Baz Luhrmann on Chanel No 5 s The One That I Want by Sunhee Grinnell Vanity Fair 15 October 2014 Every second counts in 42m three minute film by Charlotte Edwards The Sydney Morning Herald 22 November 2004External links editNo 5 the Film without credits 2 02 on YouTube No 5 the Film with credits 3 01 on YouTube Chanel 5 The One That I Want 3 16 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title No 5 the Film amp oldid 1212719051, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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