Tag Archives: Queen Street

Ads Around the City: Contagion – Bacteria Billboard

4 Oct

Building on its reputation for always being ahead of the curve, Warner Bros. Pictures Canada created a unique outdoor installation merging science and advertising that is guaranteed to leave movie lovers, science buffs and art enthusiasts in ‘awe’ or ‘eww’.

In support of Academy Award ® winner Steven Soderbergh’s latest film “Contagion” — in theatres September 9th, Warner Bros. Pictures Canada teamed up with microbiologists and immunologists from around the world to create a one-of-a-kind bacteria message board located at 409 Queen Street West in an abandoned store-front window. On August 28th, two large Petri dishes were inoculated with live bacteria including penicillin, mold and pigmented bacteria and almost overnight have revealed the true Contagion — an artistic interpretation of the spread of a virus as depicted in the film.

The public was invited to witness first-hand the remarkable growing power of natural bacteria on Wednesday August 31st from 11:00 AM — 2:00 PM. The first 50 people who arrived received passes to see “Contagion” in theatres and other themed prizes.

Advertising Agency: Lowe Roche, Toronto, Canada

Maple Pictures Kicks Ass on Queen St. W

8 Apr

The Out of Home display in the empty storefront at Queen and McCaul in Toronto (handled by Toronto’s Juxtaproductions), set up to look like Dave Lizewski’s (aka Kick-Ass) bedroom from the movie (complete with authentic props).

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Maple has also secured the storefront next to it to be set up as the film’s comic book store, Atomic. In addition, the actors playing Kick-Ass and Hit-Girl will be on-location and in-costume at Queen and McCaul on April 15, the day before the film premieres.

Related posts:
Vampires Invade Queen St. W
Sherlock Holmes in Toronto

The Queens

10 Feb

From Marketing Magazine: Disney creates Red Queen and White Queen stops on TTC
By Kristin Laird

Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Canada has set the stage for a royal battle between the “Red” and “White” Queens with a subway station domination that promotes the March 5 release of Alice in Wonderland, a 3D fantasy adventure directed by Tim Burton.

Toronto’s Queen Street subway station has been taken over by platform poster displays and large-scale custom decals featuring the Queens (the Red Queen played by Helena Bonham Carter and the White Queen played by Anne Hathaway) in scenes from the Mad Hatter’s tea party.

The effort is meant to give “a feeling of the magic of Wonderland and play up the rivalry of the two Queens,” said Lauren Richards, CEO of SMG Canada, which includes Starcom, the agency that handled the placement.

The words “Red” and “White” appear above the “Queen” station signs on the platform walls, marking the first time the Toronto Transit Commission has allowed the station name to be incorporated into advertising.

“The impact of the advertising being integrated into the station name is really amazing,” said Richards. “That’s where the magic is, we’re embedding into content in the subway.”

According to Starcom, an estimated 57,000 TTC riders pass through the Queen Street station each day.

Large decals featuring Johnny Depp’s Mad Hatter also appear in the stairwell and in the tunnel between the two platforms. Disney’s L.A. office tailored the creative for the Queen Street station, said Richards.

Vampires Invade Queen St. W

18 Jan

From the Torontoist: “Vampires and Illegal Signs on Queen West” By Alixandra Gould

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The property at 224 Queen Street West, at the corner of Queen and McCaul, appears at first glance to be an ordinary neighbourhood coffee shop. That is, until you look closer. Inside, the glass fridges are filled with bags of fake blood, newspapers blaring “China to stop all blood exports” headlines line the windowsill, and the drink list looks like a vampire’s favourite meal. Stepping back, there’s a sign reading “Capture Humans” with Uncle Sam pointing at the passing pedestrians. And above that, a gigantic billboard advertising the new vampire thriller, Daybreakers. This isn’t a coffee shop at all: it’s one giant promotion.

Juxta Productions, an outdoor-advertising sign studio located on Front Street, has been renting the space since the summer, and is responsible for the Daybreakers Blood Café. It combines an art installation on the inside with large advertisements that wrap around the outside.

Maple Pictures, the company behind Daybreakers, contacted Juxta after seeing the success of previous advertisements at the location for Sherlock Holmes, Whiteout, and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.

The installation is certainly a conversation piece, but part of it is also illegal. Rami Tabello of illegalsigns.ca, a organization dedicated to eradicating unlawful billboards around the city, said, “The signage is illegal because it violates the fire safety provisions on the Ontario Fire Code for obstructing windows required to be unobstructed under the code.” That means Juxta could face about one thousand dollars in fines right now, and that the number would increase when the new billboard bylaw that was passed by City Council on December 7, 2009, regulating and taxing outdoor advertising, comes into effect this April, said Tabello. Furthermore, the original Harry Potter display that adorned the property last summer was erected during the city workers’ strike, specifically to bypass normal licensing procedures.

But Patrick Little, executive producer of Juxta, says, “Why should I be fined for creating cultural jobs in the knowledge economy? Writers, designers, printers, scenic painters, set decorators, grips, actors, hair and makeup, wardrobe, projectionists and even a graffiti artist doing their own piece worked on those installations.” (The Toronto-based artists include Melissa Yang, who played the vampire, and also did everyone’s hair and makeup for their promotional day. Larry Saunders was the key scenic painter for the Daybreakers display, and Wen Xie was the ice sculptor for the Whiteout installation.)

Little also points out that they transformed the property from a “crack-house squat” into a respectable gateway attraction.

But it doesn’t look like Juxta will be inhabiting the property for much longer. An application for a demolition permit was filed in 2008, and an application to build a new property is currently working its way through the planning process. Soon, fake blood and huge billboards will likely be replaced by a five-storey mixed use development that includes storefronts, parking, offices, and residences. Little adds, “Unfortunately, it is now the visual artists, like the film workers before them, who are at risk of losing their jobs due to the misguided and narrow-minded priorities of the current administration which has embraced condo development as the holy grail of city building.”

It’s prime real estate that a whole bunch of people are waiting to sink their teeth into.

Sherlock Holmes in Toronto

5 Jan

While Avatar was the most anticipated film of the holidays, you wouldn’t know it by living in Toronto. Everywhere you looked in December, the city was plastered in advertising for Warner Brothers’ Sherlock Holmes.

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Warner Brothers Toronto Twitter

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