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The Storefront of Sephora with the Pride campaign visible.
A young women sitting on the ground holding hands with her mother who also sits on the ground. There are cushions and flowers on the ground. It's a colourful image.

You Are My Pride • Stories of Allyship and Pride

  • Client

    Sephora

  • Solutions

    StudioSocial

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Case Study

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Celebrating those who stand with us.

We all need someone to stand with us in our most difficult and formative moments—and that’s especially true for those in the LGBTQ+ community. An ally is someone who fights for us, lends us their voice and accepts us as we are. Sephora, one of the most important beauty player and beauty enabler in the world, aims to be such an ally by reminding people that the unlimited power of beauty is not only about appearance, and that everyone should be able to freely express their personality as they see fit. With the insight that every member of the LGBTQ+ community relies on a person close to them on their path to self-realization, we partnered with Sephora to launch “You Are My Pride,” a celebration of allyship.

Press Sephora again reaffirms its position as an Ally with the community with the goal of inspiring more and more people to do the same.
Read on Vanity Fair Pride Month 2023, beauty celebrates every nuance of love

Stories of pride and self-expression.

“You Are My Pride” follows four members of the LGBTQ+ community and a key ally from their lives. We began with a series of 30-second films in which each couple expresses what allyship means to them and their anticipation of Roma Pride. The campaign continued on Pride Day, when we dug deeper into each couple’s story to find out who they are and what brought them to Pride, this time featuring a look by a Sephora-provided makeup artist. At the end of Pride, we finished with a long-form film that retraced the entire journey of each couple—an emotional culmination of their stories, their experiences and the incredible day they lived at Roma Pride.

Inspiring everyone to be their best selves.

In addition to the incredible stories of our campaign protagonists, we helped Sephora bring the fun of Roma Pride to people near and far. Throughout the day, we captured live coverage of the event while following our couples. In stores of each city where Pride events took place, Sephora activated makeup stations to help people prepare. We helped bring these spaces to life with key Pride visuals and branding. Ultimately, the campaign celebrated not only the community but also those who stand at its side, inspiring solidarity and inclusivity.

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Results

  • 5,8M views on Social Media
  • +150K new viewers on YouTube
  • Engagement rate x3 on TikTok

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film

Combining talent and technology to rewrite the future of digital-first storytelling.

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  • Awards

    38

  • Countries Represented

    32

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portrait of a man in a space suit
A woman lying down with a blue butterfly over her nose

Stories with soul.

We believe that great communication starts with great story telling. No matter the cost, length, or the size of the screen, the Film.Monks seek to create brave and captivating stories that make our audiences feel.

With humble beginnings in Amsterdam, we’re growing hubs across the globe from LA to Kuala Lumpur, Mexico to Madrid. We take on all aspects of production from script to screen to deliver across multiple platforms, disciplines, technologies and genres. As a result, our awards cabinet is filling up, including a 2022 Gold Lion for Best Fiction (Long Form) for our Victoria 'Cempasúchil' film.

The (open) secret to our success is our robust ecosystem of established and emerging talent around the globe, which helps us develop a diverse range of stories that matter. The latest technology in filmmaking further enhances the abilities of our team: collaborations with subject matter expertise in the Lab.Monks, Experiential.Monks, Data.monks, immersive web and more give us an edge.

Monk Thoughts If the work washes over the audience, we haven’t done our job. We seek out the stories that resonate and make people feel and do something.

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Christy Srisanan Global Executive Creative Director

A passionate community committed to the exceptional.

We’re creatives, writers, directors, producers, designers, VFX artists, editors and sound designers. It’s by inspiring, empowering and developing this creators community that we can produce the most innovative work, spanning integrated campaigns, branded entertainment, music videos, food and liquid, always-on content, broadcast and experiential.

Diversity is a word that has been swallowed up by the industry and spat out in many different forms. For us, it’s simply about giving a platform to unique, unheard and untold perspectives in filmmaking. Beyond influencing how we shape our team, this ambition drives our support of initiatives like FreeTheWork and BidBlack.

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XibalbaThrough both a film and a digital experiential platform, we paid authentic tribute to one of Mexico's most ancient traditions.

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Behind the lens.

  1. A glimpse behind some of our favorite collaborations within our global talent network • Salomon Ligthelm - Nick Enriquez - Nina Meredith - David Darg - Lewis Smithingham

  2. several women standing in a field, wearing white dresses, looking away from the camera toward a mountain

    Together for the fourth time we partnered with esteemed director Salomon Ligthelm, we shot, scored and post-produced a three-minute film reuniting families with their late loved ones in honor of the Day of the Dead.

  3. portrait of a woman in a space suit against a red rock background

    We partnered with award-winning director Nick Enriquez to capture out-of-this world stories of researchers at the Frontier Development Lab, augmented by archive and stock footage.

  4. woman sitting in a cafe booth with a patron at the next table behind her and a waitress approaching

    To support Robinhood’s mission to democratize finance for all, we teamed up with Clio and Cannes Lion-winning director Nina Meredith to produce a film that premiered during the 2021 Super Bowl.

  5. man riding a Harley Davidson motorcycle down a road through a desert landscape

    Oscar-nominated and Emmy award-winning director David Darg helped us extend focus beyond the stereotypical “hog” rider in a series of films produced for Harley-Davison’s first-ever virtual event.

  6. singer Post Malone standing in the middle of a blue room with archways and a semicircle of singers in the background

    To accompany the launch of Post Malone’s album Twelve Carat Toothache, we worked with Lumière award winner Lewis Smithingham to take fans on a musical journey made possible only in VR.

  7. We're always on the lookout for new talent to collaborate with.

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Monk Thoughts Taking an innovative approach to filmmaking breaks down traditional silos, opens up different workstreams, enables collaborations with other disciplines and lets magic happen.
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The stories we’ve told.

  1. Connection, creation and coordination • These are the three facets to innovation within the Film.Monks. Giving the talent the tools to tell new and exciting stories, produce the work more efficiently and collaborate easier with creators around.

  2. child playing with a ball, silhouetted against a yellow window curtain

    On Mexico’s National Day Against Discrimination, we launched “Mario.” The film is based on the story of Maribel “Marigol” Domínguez, who pretended to be a man for the chance to play football—and became the top scorer of the women’s national team. 9 El Ojo Awards and 6 Circulo Creativo Awards earned.

  3. Athlete putting on fencing equipment against a mirror reflection

    To support Team Toyota USA during the Tokyo Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, we leveraged new and existing footage to pay homage to the friends, families and fans who lend athletes the determination to achieve greatness.

  4. Rapper Roxxxane standing on a soapbox in the middle of a brick sidewalk as people walk by, blurred

    Railing against the artificial lifestyle ideals so common in beer culture, we took to the soap box with BrewDog and rapper Roxxxane. More akin to social commentary than typical advertising, the film celebrates BrewDog’s raw, authentic and rebellious nature.

  5. Image, drawn from arranged Oreo cookies to look like pixels, of an anime character holding an Oreo cookie

    Celebrating 25 years of adventure, we supercharged the OREO x Pokémon cookie collab with a film merging the pixel-art style of classic Pokémon video games with the look and feel of its anime series—all rendered in OREO pixels.

  6. Portrait of computer-generated Bob Paisley, an older man, looking onto a field in a stadium

    In memory of his 100th birth year, we celebrated the life of Bob Paisley in a series of 5 films. Marrying hours of archived footage with meticulous sculpting in CGI, we brought the legendary Liverpool FC manager back to the screen one last time.

  7. Two women in colorful outfits kissing, in a city setting

    To help support the launch of ZWART, a broadcaster committed to representing Dutch society in a more diverse way, we offered our creativity and studio facilities to co-develop a campaign that casts a spotlight on a variety of voices and faces.

  8. Can we bring the magic to your story? Get in touch below.

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Global studios designed to flex 
to future needs.

Our studios are equipped with an arsenal of high-end cameras, lighting equipment and robotic rigs, all operated by skilled inhouse crew who know how to get the best from them. These tools are hand-picked to keep our clients and ourselves ahead of the game, from high speed, SFX and tabletop in our Amsterdam studio and a dedicated virtual production studio in New Delhi, to beauty, fashion and automotive in our Stuttgart and LA hubs.

Want to talk films? Get in touch.

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On our minds

3 Lessons for Brands from Adobe MAX 2019

3 Lessons for Brands from Adobe MAX 2019

4 min read
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Monks

3 Lessons for Brands from Adobe MAX 2019

Adobe MAX came and went this week in LA, bringing creative professionals together with hundreds of sessions, workshops and talks. Aiming to inspire the current and next generation of creatives, the event offered rousing insights into the state of creativity today—and opportunities that artists, entertainers and brands alike can look forward to in the near future, including the next stage in storytelling defined by MediaMonks Founder and COO Wesley ter Haar, who presented at the event.

The conference began with Adobe unveiling a slew of new product updates and features, each bringing the company closer to its vision of enabling “Creativity for all,” which served as a bit of a rallying cry at the event. These announcements included Photoshop Camera, which uses machine learning to offer advanced photo filters and quick, intuitive editing; Premiere Rush, which notably lets users create and share out content to creative social platform TikTok; Adobe Aero, which lets anyone develop AR experiences without coding knowledge; and much more.

Screen Shot 2019-11-06 at 5.38.55 PM

One of the biggest conferences on creativity, this year’s Adobe MAX offered much to think about in terms of identity, voice and emotionally resonant experiences. As Adobe aims to unlock creativity for everyone, it will become even more essential that brands differentiate by building emotional resonance through the experiences they offer.

brands

MediaMonks was in good company at the UX Leaders Summit hosted at the conference.

At the heart of software like Photoshop Camera is Adobe Sensei, the company’s decidedly not-very-humanlike assistant. At a time when many have concerns over how AI will influence professional (and creative) life, Adobe markets Sensei as simply a tool that helps humans focus on what only they can do: be creative, with Sensei handling the manual processes that function as a barrier to that. But when everyone has advanced creative tools at their fingertips, what does it take to stand out? We’ve extracted a handful of key creative insights from the course of the event.

Know Your Message and What You Stand For

Of course, being a conference centered on creativity, Adobe MAX featured several voices from the world of arts and entertainment. While their insights were delivered to an audience of creatives and designers, a lot of what they had to say serves as good advice for business, too—after all, being an artist in the modern world requires a bit of an entrepreneurial edge.

Visual artist Shantell Martin opened day two’s keynote segment with an inspiring talk about stylistic voice and identity. “You have to make people care for you by caring for yourself first,” she told the audience. Further in her talk, she noted that “You don’t discover your style, you extract it.”

Monk Thoughts You have to make people care for you by caring for yourself first.

The advice applies well to brands still defining a sense of purpose. For anyone to adopt your brand—and to truly differentiate it—you must first have a good hold on what its purpose is and what you stand for. This also makes it useful to consider how that purpose might resonate differently with different audiences. Digital-native brands in particular have succeeded in this by defining themselves out of a specific need or white space, then leveraging digital channels to align with consumers through that shared sense of purpose.

Take Comfort in Discomfort

Earlier in the conference, illustrator Lisa Congdon offered her own excellent advice on artist voice: “[Finding your voice is] both an exercise in discipline and process of discovery that allows for—and requires—loads of experimentation and failure.” While that’s certainly true for brand voice, it also applies to the innovation imperative.

Innovation requires you not only understand what your brand aims to achieve, but also have an intimate understanding of your audience and how they interact. In an age of hyperadoption, real innovation comes from evolving your brand experience in lockstep with user behaviors and continual experimentation. Congdon recommends that creatives adopt a learner’s mindset that’s open to risks and embraces discomfort—an attitude that not only fosters a creative environment but can also kickstart more agile ways of working.

Open a New Chapter in the Story of Storytelling

All of the above boils down to ensuring your message truly resonates with your audience. Throughout history, humans have used the power of narrative and storytelling to achieve this, but interactive digital culture has upended the storytelling norms that had traditionally prevailed. In an on-stage interview with Jason Levine, Principal Worldwide Evangelist for Adobe Creative Cloud, famed director M. Night Shyamalan remarked that “Everything in today’s society goes back to storytelling. Right now, we’re split between fighting for the old story, and fighting for the new story. It’s time to bring in the new story.”

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Wesley ter Haar's talk focused on the power of digital storytelling and what makes it so unique.

What does that new story look like? That’s what Wesley ter Haar aimed to define in his talk, “Augmented Creativity: Emerging Platforms that Drive the Next Generation of Storytelling.” Ter Haar railed against the variations of storytelling that frequently pop up at conferences—like “storydoing” or “storymaking”—by noting that each still relies on the same form of linear narrative that today’s marketeers should break away from. “We’ve taken what is this amazing medium for creativity and innovation—the web, the internet or what we now call digital—but we’ve made it about traditional linear formats,” he says.

Netflix’s Bandersnatch might have brought interactive film to the masses last year, for instance, but it was hardly groundbreaking or immersive compared to what’s come before it; video games had already explored what ter Haar calls the “interrupt to interact” narrative model for decades, and we’ve moved away from truly personalized experiences enabled by an API-driven open web. And when it comes to personalization as it’s commonly used, says ter Haar, “There’s a lot of engineering, but very little empathy.”

Screen Shot 2019-11-06 at 5.39.17 PM

In a new era of ecosystems and total brand experience, ter Haar calls for a new definition of storytelling: “A journey focused on the user that creates a personal path, driven by design and distinction, powered by innovation.” And these stories should show no end, either: “Digital storytelling is more input-based, trying to get the next ‘yes, and…’ moment,” says ter Haar, noting how each piece of content ideally leads into the next step within a content ecosystem. To offer stories that truly resonate, brands must use storytelling to bridge together creative and media. This requires breaking away from big ideas that function like film, and instead drive impact by recognizing user behaviors and shifting toward an insight-driven focus on the customer experience.

Focused on inspiring artists and creatives, Adobe MAX featured a lot of marketing insights for brands as well—like the importance in establishing purpose, voice and emotion. 3 Lessons for Brands from Adobe MAX 2019 Adobe MAX offered ample advice for brands on establishing voice, purpose and emotional resonance.
adobe max adobe personalization storytelling wesley ter haar creativity creative differentiation brand voice marketing insights

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The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

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