Dark times call for dark comedy
Laughter is the best medicine, they say. But times like these need more than medicine, humanity needs life support, and it comes in the shape of dark comedy, says Dave Billing, ECD at Fold7. Here he explores how advertising is turning to gallows humour in the face of bleak times.
It’s well known that professions with the darkest sense of humour are those that routinely face the bleakest situations – the police, firefighters, ambulance crew, the military. What’s true on an individual level is true at a cultural one, too. When the shit goes down, the humour gets dark.
We’re not the first generation to laugh in the face of the apocalypse. We’ve been living with a sense of imminent civilisational collapse since ancient times. 2000 years ago, the Greek playwright Aristophanes penned arguably the first examples of dark comedy [between 423-405 BC: The Clouds, The Wasps, The Birds, Lysistrata, The Women at the Thesmophoria Festival and The Frogs] in a time of plague, military defeat and a general sense in Athens that the party was over.
Above: A Scene from Charlie Chaplin’s 1940 movie, The Great Dictator.
Creatives have been at it ever since; Chaplin’s The Great Dictator punctured the horror of WWII, whilst Dr Strangelove had a right laugh pondering the nuclear holocaust.
There’s a sense that after years of purpose-washing, adland is finally getting its funny back.
Fast forward to now, and we’re back in the most fertile of territories. The post-2016 horror show that has produced Trump, Brexit, Covid and the Ukraine war in short order looks to be the ripest time for dark comedy since WWII.
When it comes to comms, there’s a sense that after years of purpose-washing, adland is finally getting its funny back. Kantar data shows that despite its declining use over the last 20 years, humour is still the most powerful creative enhancer of receptivity.
Credits
powered by- Director Ali Ali
The most commonly used type of humour is visual or slapstick, at 45 per cent of humorous ads. But only 1 per cent of funny ads use dark humour. No surprise. This is lethal stuff. It’s hard to get right.
Difficult material to handle it may be, but some of my favourite funny campaigns of recent times shade towards the dark, from the disconcerting to the ghoulish. Arab Dairy's Never Say No To Panda, the Jukka Brothers for MTV, Barry the Biscuit Boy for Cravendale, Three Little Pigs for the Guardian, and of course Skittles’ loveable cavalcade of freaks.
There’s nothing like a sense of 'what the fuck just happened' to reset all of our comedic sensibilities.
Some of my own favourite creative projects have dredged up laughs from the darker side of life – a fast-food commercial that is interrupted by balaclava-wearing, violent activists. A betting ad where one of the two protagonists is attacked by a polar bear whilst the other listens to the match. I’m sorry, I couldn’t help it.
Credits
powered by- Agency DAVID/Madrid
- Production Company MJZ/USA
- Director Juan Cabral
-
-
Unlock full credits and more with a Source + shots membership.
Credits
powered by- Agency DAVID/Madrid
- Production Company MJZ/USA
- Director Juan Cabral
- Chief Creative Officer Francisco (Pancho) Cassis
- Chief Operating Officer Sylvia Panico
- Executive Creative Director Saulo Rocha
- Executive Creative Director Andre Toledo
- Creative Director Fred Bosch
- Copywriter Guillermo Pueyrredon
- Senior Art Director Pedro Sattin
- Producer Alejandro Falduti
- Executive Producer David Zander
- Production Service Labhouse
- Executive Producer Flora Fernandez Marengo
- Music Company Pickle Music + Sound
- Sound Design Tres Sonido
- Creative Director/Copywriter David Krueger
- Producer Emma Wilcockson
- DP Leandro Filloy
- Production Designer Sebastian Orgambide
- Editor Emiliano Fardaus
- Post Producer Julieta Fernandez Castagnino
- Colorist Alejandro Armaleo
- Composer/Creative Director Alexis Estiz
- Producer Lupita Alvarez
Credits
powered by- Agency DAVID/Madrid
- Production Company MJZ/USA
- Director Juan Cabral
- Chief Creative Officer Francisco (Pancho) Cassis
- Chief Operating Officer Sylvia Panico
- Executive Creative Director Saulo Rocha
- Executive Creative Director Andre Toledo
- Creative Director Fred Bosch
- Copywriter Guillermo Pueyrredon
- Senior Art Director Pedro Sattin
- Producer Alejandro Falduti
- Executive Producer David Zander
- Production Service Labhouse
- Executive Producer Flora Fernandez Marengo
- Music Company Pickle Music + Sound
- Sound Design Tres Sonido
- Creative Director/Copywriter David Krueger
- Producer Emma Wilcockson
- DP Leandro Filloy
- Production Designer Sebastian Orgambide
- Editor Emiliano Fardaus
- Post Producer Julieta Fernandez Castagnino
- Colorist Alejandro Armaleo
- Composer/Creative Director Alexis Estiz
- Producer Lupita Alvarez
But is this trickle of darkness about to become a fully-fledged torrent of pitch-black LOLs?
Well, no. But I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re about to see a lot more of it.
And it’s all because of the pandemic.
I was delighted to see PopCorners using two fictional meth cookers as their Super Bowl spokespeople.
There’s nothing like a sense of what the fuck just happened to reset all of our comedic sensibilities. As the pandemic reached its endgame, and the sad piano filled ads showing empty streets faded out, we started to see campaigns like Wrigley’s For When It’s Time or Burger King’s Confusing Times. A little bit edgy. Unafraid to look at humanity at its most vulnerable, lost and bewildered - and laugh at it.
Credits
powered by- Agency Fold7/London
- Production Company MindsEye
- Director Thomas Ormonde
-
-
Unlock full credits and more with a Source + shots membership.
Credits
powered by- Agency Fold7/London
- Production Company MindsEye
- Director Thomas Ormonde
- Executive Producer Debbie Ninnis
- Editing Shift Post
- Editor Saam Hodivala
- Post Production/VFX/Color Black Kite Studios
- Producer Polly Durrance
- VFX Supervisor Daniel Sanders
- Colorist Tom Mangham
- Sound String and Tins
- Producer Eimear Ni Ghuaire
- Sound Designer Adam Smyth
- Executive Creative Director Dave Billing
- Creative Director Rob Griffiths
- Producer Jonny Kight
- Creative Director James Hudson
- Creative Philippa Baines
- DP Kasper Wind Nielsen
- Senior Producer Emily Hendrey
- Head of Creative Services Maggie Roberts
Credits
powered by- Agency Fold7/London
- Production Company MindsEye
- Director Thomas Ormonde
- Executive Producer Debbie Ninnis
- Editing Shift Post
- Editor Saam Hodivala
- Post Production/VFX/Color Black Kite Studios
- Producer Polly Durrance
- VFX Supervisor Daniel Sanders
- Colorist Tom Mangham
- Sound String and Tins
- Producer Eimear Ni Ghuaire
- Sound Designer Adam Smyth
- Executive Creative Director Dave Billing
- Creative Director Rob Griffiths
- Producer Jonny Kight
- Creative Director James Hudson
- Creative Philippa Baines
- DP Kasper Wind Nielsen
- Senior Producer Emily Hendrey
- Head of Creative Services Maggie Roberts
It became clear that being earnest wasn’t going to save the world. That perhaps creating sincere, purpose-driven communications just added to the unbearable weight of living in such precarious times.
Even on the hallowed streets of Cannes, once washed squeaky clean by purpose-driven campaigns, dark comedy is getting a look in.
We needed, as an industry, as a culture, to start taking the load off a little. But these are transparent times, where we all have unprecedented access to information – so let’s laugh. But let’s also not kid ourselves. No one is pretending that these are not Difficult Times To Be Alive.
Even on the hallowed streets of Cannes, once washed squeaky clean by purpose-driven campaigns, dark comedy is getting a look in. This year, Apple’s RIP Leon, which enjoys the idea of accidentally killing the pet you’re supposed to be looking after, won the Grand Prix. Last year, the even darker and quite frankly hilarious Twix ad Bears won Silver in Film. There is something deliciously rotten in the state of Adland.
Credits
powered by- Agency TBWA\Media Arts Lab/Los Angeles
- Production Company Biscuit Filmworks/USA
- Director Andreas Nilsson
-
-
Unlock full credits and more with a Source + shots membership.
Credits
powered by- Agency TBWA\Media Arts Lab/Los Angeles
- Production Company Biscuit Filmworks/USA
- Director Andreas Nilsson
Credits
powered by- Agency TBWA\Media Arts Lab/Los Angeles
- Production Company Biscuit Filmworks/USA
- Director Andreas Nilsson
Our new campaign, Laugh Through It, for Audible, sees a woman’s life unravel in a handful of hours. And that’s the cuddly end of the spectrum. GiffGaff’s wonderful Ode To Bad pays cinematic tribute to the shittier end of the species.
I’m a huge fan of Droga5’s beautifully dark SetApp campaign which showed us a child who plays hide and seek and is never found and a husband who permanently disappears after a magic trick goes wrong. I was delighted to see PopCorners using two fictional meth cookers as their Super Bowl spokespeople.
Let’s see where this dark tide takes us. It’s worth the ride. Because if you can laugh in the face of the Apocalypse, it shows you’re still alive.