Staff Reporters
May 6, 2013

Usain Bolt fronts global Samsung NX300 campaign

GLOBAL - In a rather obvious pairing, Usain Bolt is fronting Samsung's Smart Camera NX300 and Cheil Worldwide's 'shoot fast share faster' campaign.

wide player in 16:9 format. Used on article page for Campaign.

The campaign, which has been running in Australia, Korea and Taiwan as well as markets around the world including the US, Germany and Kazakhstan, is aimed at showcasing the camera's accuracy and speed as well as its wi-fi capabilities. 

The TV ad, created by award-wining director Mark Romanek working with music composer Josh Ralph, has attracted more than 2.8 million YouTube views. 

In the first month of its launch, Samsung claims to have sold 7,000 units of the camera in South Korea alone. 

Creative Credits


ECD : Wain Choi
Creative Director : Jax Jung
Director : Mark Romanek
Director of Photography : Phillippe Le Sourd
Production : Anonymous Content
Art Director : Joon Koh, Alberto Rodriguez
Copy Writer : Alberto Rodriguez, Jonathan Deblois
Producer : John Park, Seungwoo Son
Offline Editor :  Paul Martinez
Online Editor : Zon Kyo Lee
3D CGI : Cottage Industries
2D : Sungmoon Kim
Music composer : Josh Ralph
Account Director : JB Lee
Account Manager : Najeong Kim, David Moon, HW Kang
Marketing Manager : Frank Lee, SS Park

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

30 minutes ago

Nike honours Rafael Nadal’s career with cinematic film

The campaign was created by Wieden & Kennedy London.

13 hours ago

Is cheap the new black? E-commerce's existential crisis

Ultra-cheap e-commerce is a race to the bottom. CMOs must build value-driven strategies to survive the "87% OFF!" era, opines the author.

13 hours ago

Omnicom, WPP and Publicis shops vie for top spots ...

Meanwhile, four new agencies enter the top 20.

14 hours ago

Why brands are scaling back their sustainability ...

A record-breaking hot year makes COP29's climate finance promises feel dangerously inadequate. Corporate sustainability is crumbling under cost pressures and a "quiet" greenwashing surge.