Ikea's first Christmas advert by Mother encourages the nation to defy 'home share' and host with pride

Ikea's first Christmas advert by Mother encourages the nation to defy 'home share' and host with pride

BOAST is a place where you can find out about forthcoming creative campaigns. 

It is essentially a space where agencies can tell us about the work they are proud of; blowing their own trumpet, so to speak. 

Here's the latest from the creative world as we know it.

A campaign by Mother

“It was born from the common feeling, that along with the seasonal joys, a lot of us feel a looming sense of dread when it comes to hosting others, with many feeling ashamed of our homes over the Christmas period.

“We believe that every home can and should be worthy of a get-together and that with a little imagination, some clever products and ideas, there’s no reason not to be proud and invite your nearest and dearest over. This campaign aims to inspire us all to get our homes party-ready and ‘Silence the Critics’, once and for all.”

‘Silence the Critics’ opens with a small flat that’s seen better days. The family who live there are going about their business when the woman’s phone pings. It’s her friend confirming they’re still on for dinner at her home tonight. She hesitates before replying, looking around at the state of the flat.

As the woman wonders whether to have her friends over, the bespoke rap track, by D Double E, kicks in. Inanimate objects come to life, from lucky cats and novelty teapots, bringing the woman’s insecurities about her home to life through the rap. The state of the house is ridiculed by an array of figurines, from the tired furnishings and cracked walls to the lack of space.

Just as a toy dinosaur begins to rap more devastating blows, the woman’s hand appears and chucks him into the toy chest. Watched in stunned silence by their critical belongings, the couple transform their place, getting it ready for dinner with friends. They replace an outdated mirror with a stylish IKEA one, give the old sofa a new lease of life with an IKEA cover, and hang a framed IKEA print over the crack in the wall.

Later in the evening when the party is in full swing, the dinosaur peaks his head out of the toy chest, complimenting the couple on what they’ve done with the place – their critics have been silenced.

Leading home furnishing retailer IKEA has launched its first ever Christmas campaign for the UK and Ireland, encouraging people to defy ‘home shame’ and open up their homes to guests this festive season.

The campaign kicks off with an advert featuring a couple who become racked with ‘home shame’ when they’re faced with impending guests. Suddenly, a whole host of ornaments and objects come to life and taunt them about the state of their home by performing an original grime track, voiced by legendary MC D Double E. Deciding to take action, the couple spruce up their place with some simple IKEA solutions, and Silence the Critics once and for all.

The advert deliberately goes against the tide of over-sentimental Christmas ads, and aims to delight audiences with its humorous, irreverent take on festive hosting.

The campaign launched with the film across broadcast and VOD TV, cinema and digital media on 8th November. The 90”, 60” and 20” edits are fully supported with OOH, CRM and PR. Bespoke social content features three films, showing how to tackle potential home shame with simple changes using handy tips and IKEA products.

Complementing the campaign, IKEA is hosting a series of in-store events showing customers how easy it is to get their home party-ready, from virtual reality makeovers to ‘Christmas Treetorials’ and hosting hacks.

UK and Ireland County Marketing Manager, Sarah Green, comments: “Our first IKEA Christmas advert focuses on the phenomenon of ‘home shame’ - encouraging people to overcome the negative voices in their head holding them back from opening up their homes.

CREDITS

Agency: Mother

Production Company: MJZ

Director: Tom Kuntz

MJZ Producer: Emma Butterworth

MJZ Production Manager: Daniel Gay

Production Designer: Chris Oddy

Editing: Russell Icke at the Whitehouse

Music Supervision: Dave Bass and Arnold Hattingh at Wake the Town

Sound: 750mph

Post: Electric Theatre Collective

VFX: Electric Theatre Collective

VXF Producer: Magda Krimitsou

VXF Coordinator: Larisa Covaciu

VXF Creative Director: James Sindle

2D Lead: James Belch

3D Lead: Patrick Krafft

2D Artists: Chris Fraser, Tomer Epsthein

3D Artists:
Jordan Dunstall, Ryan Maddox, Mark Bailey, Remy Herisse, Edwin Leeds, Gregory Martin, Nikolai Maderthoner, Will Preston, Stefan Brown, Adrian Lan Sun Luk, Piers Limberg, Zach Pindolia, Olivia Grimmer, Romain Thirion, Richard Fry

Colourist: Luke Morrison

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