Archive

Lamborghini – Gods of dust

     A gesture on the surface.
     A force underneath.

A woman draws the Taurus symbol — not as a sign, but as a trigger. What starts as a simple mark sets something in motion. The environment reacts. The energy shifts.

The Lamborghini doesn’t enter the scene — it emerges from it. As if called. As if it was already there, waiting.

The film moves from control to instinct. From stillness to acceleration.

The symbol becomes trajectory. The gesture becomes power.

Taurus isn’t about chasing. It’s about attraction.
Everything converges.

This isn’t a campaign.
It’s a signal.

Apple – Apple Watch

     Time doesn’t slow down. It sharpens.

This film doesn’t follow movement — it locks in. Every second hits. Every gesture lands. The Apple Watch isn’t a device anymore — it’s pulse, rhythm, instinct.

We’re not watching time pass.
We’re watching it trigger.

Everything lives in the body — breath, motion, impact. The edit cuts like a heartbeat. Precision meets urgency. No performance. Just readiness.

Clean. Reactive. Alive.

Light feels like data. Movement feels elevated. The world tightens — and suddenly, everything clicks.

This isn’t about telling time.
It’s about owning it.

Not tech.
Instinct, engineered.

Paco Rabanne – Million Gold

     Million Gold For Her is a bold celebration of confidence and modern femininity. Starring Gigi Hadid, the film transforms gold into a symbol of self-expression, power, and unapologetic presence.

Through striking visuals and effortless attitude, Rabanne reimagines the Million universe as a statement of identity — where fragrance becomes an extension of personality, not just an accessory. Million Gold For Her captures the spirit of a woman who owns her shine.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: PUIG
Executive Producer: Camille Lambert
Line Producer: Annabel Rosier
DOP: Darius Khondji
1st AD: Fred Monnet
Art Director: Jean Philippe Chemin
Hair Stylist: Stephane Lancien
Make Up Artist: Diane Kendal
Editing: Company Poster
Editor: Nicolas Larrouquère
Post Producer: Poster Company
Sound Design: Capitaine Plouf

     1 Million For Him is a bold, stylish celebration of confidence, charisma, and unapologetic presence. The film embodies Rabanne’s iconic blend of luxury and attitude, transforming fragrance into an expression of personality and magnetism.

Through striking visuals and kinetic energy, 1 Million For Him captures the essence of modern masculinity — where power isn’t whispered, it’s worn with fl air and unapologetic intent. Rabanne’s signature aesthetic turns scent into statement: audacious, warm, and unmistakably unforgettable.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: PUIG
Executive Producer: Camille Lambert
Line Producer: Annabel Rosier
DOP: Darius Khondji
1st AD: Fred Monnet
Art Director: Jean Philippe Chemin
Hair Stylist: Stephane Lancien
Make Up Artist: Diane Kendal
Editing: Company Poster
Editor: Nicolas Larrouquère
Post Producer: Poster Company
Sound Design: Capitaine Plouf

Travis Scott x Jordan – The Class Of XXXIII

     A ceremony on the surface. A manifesto underneath.

Travis Scott steps in as “Principal Scott” — part authority, part myth — addressing a generation already on the edge. In front of him: the Class of XXXIII. Not students. Future legends.

This isn’t school.
This is initiation.

The film moves from control to chaos, from structure to instinct. The speech becomes a chant. The energy builds. You can feel the moment about to crack.

Powered by Stargazing, it goes cosmic. Pre-game turns into pre-destiny. Jordan Brand becomes more than a name — it’s a code.

This isn’t a campaign.
It’s a signal.

The next generation isn’t waiting—
they’re already in.

Natural Diamond Council – Many Lives

     Many Lives is a cinematic meditation on the idea that a single object can accompany multiple chapters of a life. The film reimagines natural diamonds not as static symbols of luxury, but as living witnesses to time, memory, and transformation.

Set against the warmth and elegance of Italy, the narrative follows Lily James as she moves through a series of moments that feel both intimate and universal. Each scene reflects a different stage, mood, or identity — suggesting that a life is never singular, but composed of many versions of ourselves.

Natural diamonds travel through these moments, absorbing stories, emotions, and meaning. Passed from one moment to another, they embody continuity — linking past, present, and future through experience rather than possession.

Lily James brings quiet strength and authenticity to the film, anchoring the journey with sensitivity and grace. Her presence reinforces the central idea that beauty gains depth through time, and value is created through lived experience.

Many Lives expresses the Natural Diamond Council’s vision: that natural diamonds endure because they live alongside us — evolving with every chapter, every memory, and every life they touch.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: Jane Smith
Executive Producer: Valerie Romer
Line Producer: Hera King
Managing Director: Charles-Marie Anthonioz
DOP: Hoyte Van Hoytema
1st AD: João Pedro Ruivo
Production Designer: Luísa Pacheco
Costume Designer: Joanne Gatefield
Hair Stylist: Jenny Cho
Make Up Artist: Melanie Inglessis-Phifer
Editor: Exile Edit
Post Producer: Michael Miller

LADY GAGA x Le Joker – Folie à deux

     Folie à Deux is a striking cinematic collision between contemporary performance and classical art. Set inside the Musée du Louvre, the film transforms one of the world’s most iconic cultural spaces into a stage for obsession, duality, and theatrical excess.

Moving through the museum’s silent galleries, Lady Gaga embodies a figure suspended between control and chaos. Her presence turns the Louvre into a living set — where history, pop culture, and performance art coexist. The film unfolds like a nocturnal reverie, blurring the boundaries between character and artist, fiction and reality.

At the heart of the film stands La Joconde (Mona Lisa). In a provocative gesture, Gaga confronts the world’s most famous painting, tracing a Joker-like smile on the glass that protects it. The moment becomes a powerful symbol — a dialogue between madness and mastery, contemporary myth and timeless icon.

More than a confrontation, the encounter reflects the film’s core theme: folie à deux — a shared madness, a mirrored obsession. The Louvre’s masterpieces no longer observe from a distance; they become silent witnesses to a modern performance that challenges the hierarchy between high art and pop culture.

Folie à Deux is a cultural statement — a bold exploration of identity, performance, and artistic freedom, where a global icon steps into the temple of art history and leaves a mark that feels both irreverent and deeply symbolic.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: Warner
Executive Producer: Benoit Roques
Line Producer: Vincent Veve
DOP: Nicolas Loir
1st AD: Daniel Ditteman
Production Designer: Benoist Butin
Costume Designer: Diane Gaignant
Hair Stylist: Gaga Team
Make Up Artist: Gaga Team
Editing Company: Poster Company
Editor: Jon Echeveste
Post Producer: Mélissa Brouet

A$AP Rocky – Everyday

     In this playful, imagined narrative, the film follows A$AP Rocky as a man who has reached the height of success and wealth, looking back at the energy and recklessness of his youth. What unfolds is less a linear story than a stream of memories — flashes of hunger, attitude, and ambition that once defined him.

Luxury surrounds him, but it doesn’t erase the past. Instead, it triggers it. The film contrasts the polished world of success with raw recollections of early days — moments driven by instinct, risk, and the desire to be seen. Youth appears not as nostalgia, but as a force that still shapes the present. This backward glance is playful yet revealing. It suggests that behind the icon, the hunger never fully disappears. The drive that once pushed him forward still lives beneath the surface of comfort and status.

The film becomes an allegory of success itself: how reaching the top doesn’t silence the past, but turns it into an echo — sometimes empowering, sometimes haunting.

More than a celebration of wealth, the fi lm is a refl ection on identity, memory, and the tension between who we were and who we become.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: Music Video
Executive Producer: Jules de Chateleux
Line Producer: PJ Sodaski
DOP: Alexis Zabe
1st AD: Mitch Yapkon
Production Designer: Jason Fijal
Hair Stylist: Lauren Michelle
Make Up Artist: Lauren Michelle
Editor: Nicolas Larrouquere
Post Producer: Mathematic

 

Perrier – The Icon

     The Icon reimagines an emblem of timeless art through the lens of modern eff ervescence. In this cinematic allegory, Mona Lisa — long held as the epitome of mystery and poise — steps out of her frame and embarks on a journey that transforms her into an emblem of Perrier’s sparkling personality.

Set between the hallowed halls of cultural history and the kinetic energy of contemporary life, the film plays on contrast. Mona Lisa’s serene composure meets Perrier’s vibrant bubbles; her stillness finds rhythm in motion. What was once a static symbol of beauty becomes alive with curiosity, sparkle, and playful confidence.

The narrative unfolds as a metaphor for reinvention. Just as Perrier’s effervescence awakens the senses, the reimagined Mona Lisa awakens to a world where tradition and freshness collide. Her transformation is not denial of history, but a celebration of evolution — a reminder that icons endure when they adapt, surprise, and continue to inspire.

Visually, the film turns bubbles into narrative punctuation and motion into meaning. Mona Lisa’s gaze becomes alive; her step forward becomes a declaration. What emerges is not simply a reinterpretation, but a statement about the enduring power of reinvention.

The Icon is more than a brand film — it is a manifesto for timeless vitality, where classic meets effervescent, and history dances with the present.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: RosaPark
Executive Producer: Jean Duhamel
Line Producer: Annabel Rosier
DOP: Matias Boucard
1st AD: Frederic Monnet
Production Designer: Arnaud Roth
Art Director: Sophian Bouadjera / Frédéric Leclerc / Antoine Blondet
Costume Designer: Laura Tunon Mendez
Editing Company: Poster Company
Editor: Nicolas Larrouquere / Philippe Roch
Post Producer: Cyril Bordesoulle

Gesaffelstein – Pursuit

       Pursuit is a raw and visceral visual statement, a descent into obsession, control, and the darker impulses of human nature. The film unfolds like a relentless chase, blurring the line between hunter and hunted, power and surrender.

Built around tension rather than narrative exposition, the video embraces a stark, physical language. Bodies move with urgency, driven by instinct, trapped in a closed environment where escape feels impossible. Every gesture, every cut amplifies a sense of claustrophobia and inevitability.

The visual approach mirrors Gesaffelstein’s sound: brutal, hypnotic, and uncompromising. Minimalist yet aggressive, the film strips everything down to its core elements — movement, rhythm, and raw energy — creating a direct collision between image and music.

Pursuit is not a story to be explained, but an experience to be endured. A film that captures the essence of Gesaffelstein’s universe: cold, intense, and relentlessly powerful.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: Music Video
Executive Producer: Jules de Chateleux
DOP: Nicolas Loir
1st AD: Mark Zarka
Production Designer: Zelda Bensoussane
Hair Stylist: Corinne Gues
Make Up Artist: Cédric Kerguillec
Editing Company: Home Digital Pictures
Editor: Nicolas Larrouquere
Post Producer: Clémence Cuvelier, Vincent Heine

Gesaff Hate or glory

      The film draws from a dominant trend in American rap culture, where gold stands as the ultimate symbol of success, power, and social elevation.

Here, wealth is no longer a reward, but an obsession. Having overthrown the local kingpin, the hero refuses to stop at power alone. He pushes further, seeking total immersion in the symbol that defines his ascent. By plunging himself into gold, he attempts to become untouchable — eternal.

This act fractures his world. Admiration slowly mutates into jealousy, tension, and silent hostility among those closest to him. Surrounded by gold, the hero becomes trapped by it — weighed down, immobilized, unable to move.

What should have crowned him instead imprisons him. Glory transforms into paralysis. The film exposes the paradox of excess, where absolute wealth no longer liberates, but consumes.

Worked With Love By:

Agency: Music Video
Executive Producer: Jules de Chateleux
DOP: Michael Ragen
1st AD: Jorge Pallares
Make Up Artist: Haley O’Neil, Victoria Aronson
Editing Company: Home Digital Pictures
Editor: Nicolas Larrouquere
Post Producer: Clémence Cuvelier, Paul Crehange