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The Callner Brothers know exactly how commercials should look and sound, and they put that knowledge to good use with this funny, cliché-destroying short.

BY Joe Berkowitz1 minute read

Sometimes, the fake ads on Saturday Night Live are the best part of the show. But while the SNL team are experts at mimicking specific ads, or wringing a timely social message out of the format, they clearly do not know the medium as intimately as the commercial directing and producing team Ben and Adam Callner do.

With the short film Adman, the brothers playfully dissect their own trade and rearrange its vital organs into Jackson Pollock splatter art. It’s a surreal narrative piece entirely comprised of fake ads that, together, form a complete story arc. Now, the story itself–a boy-meets-girl yarn, ostensibly set in the ad world–isn’t exactly groundbreaking, beyond the casual handling of its big twist. What’s amazing, though, is the command the Callners have over the visual language, cadence, tonal humor, and overall vibe of various prime-time ads. This film should feel incredibly familiar, even as it descends into the lunacy of an ice cream-based sex act the likes of which you’ve probably never seen.

But if the absurdity is recognizable, so is the manipulative commercialization of human emotions during the “dramatic” scenes–which appears to be the part of an adman’s job I would guess least appeals to the Callners.

Have a look at the whole film below.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Joe Berkowitz is an opinion columnist at Fast Company. His latest book, American Cheese: An Indulgent Odyssey Through the Artisan Cheese World, is available from Harper Perennial. More


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