45cm x 60cm
Anticipation is an Irish advertisement launched by
Guinness plc in 1994 to promote
Guinness-brand
draught stout. The advert, which appeared in
print,
posters, and
cinema and television spots, was conceived by Irish
advertising agency Arks,
and starred relatively unknown Irish actor
Joe McKinney as the 'Dancing Man' and Gordon Winter as the barman. It was the final part of the "Guinness Time"
advertising campaign, which had been running in Ireland since the late 1980s.
The advert was credited with increasing Guinness' sales, market share and brand awareness figures. However, controversy arose following claims of plagiarism raised by British director
Mehdi Norowzian, who launched an unsuccessful lawsuit in 1998 seeking remuneration for the use of techniques and style from his 1992 short film
Joy.
Sequence
The low-budget ad featured only two characters: a patron of a
pub and the barman serving him. The patron (McKinney) orders a pint of Guinness stout and, while waiting for the pint to be poured, carries out a series of quirky dancing movements with the settling pint in the foreground, to the amusement of the barman (Winter). The piece ends with the patron taking his first sip of the freshly poured pint overlaid by the Guinness
advertising slogan "No time like Guinness Time". The advert is set to
Guaglione by
Pérez Prado, and makes heavy use of
jump cutting from a static camera to allow the dancer to make a series of movements that could not be achieved in reality.
Reception
The distinctive jump cut editing techniques of
Anticipation won the commercial critical acclaim and several awards from within the advertising industry, including the 1995 Institute of Creative Advertising & Design craft award for
editing as well as a Gold Medal for editing and a Golden Shark award at the
Kinsale International Advertising Festival.
The success of the campaign led Guinness to re-broadcast it in the United Kingdom in 1995, as a transition between the campaign "The Man With the Guinness"/"Pure Genius", which had just concluded with
Chain, and its new "Black and White" campaign, still in development.
Though
Chain was to be the last in the
Pure Genius campaign,
Anticipationwas tagged with the
Pure Genius slogan in the UK instead of
There's No Time Like Guinness Time.
As a result of its featuring in the spot, Pérez Prado's
Guaglione reached the Number 1 spot in the Irish
music charts,
and Number 2 in the British
Top 40.
Lawsuit
In 1992, British director
Mehdi Norowzian submitted a
show reel containing a number of short examples of his work to several prospective employers, including the Irish advertising agency Arks Ltd., in the hopes of being taken on to direct one or more of their commercials. Included on the reel was a short piece entitled
Joy, which was shot using a static camera on a London rooftop and comprised a jump cut sequence of a man performing an extended dance of exuberance against a plain canvas background.
Arks Ltd. were contracted by Guinness to produce an advertisement to run in Ireland. Among the ideas proposed was one based on a scene from the
cinematic version of
Roddy Doyle's novel,
The Snapper, where a man rushes into a pub to celebrate the birth of his grandson with a pint of Guinness. The artistic director at Arks, thinking of possible ways to build on the concept, recalled Norowzian's submitted reel and came up with a script and storyboard based on
Joy to present to Guinness. The idea was accepted, and Arks approached Norowzian to direct the commercial. Norowzian refused, as he was unwilling to simply "commercialise" an old idea, and wanted to create something new. The agency then took on Richie Smyth as director, urging him to create something "with an atmosphere broadly similar to that portrayed in
Joy". Feeling that the original storyboard was too close to
Joy, a new one was prepared. The result was
Anticipation.
Following the broadcast of the television spot in 1994, Norowzian lodged a complaint and ultimately a
lawsuit against Arks Ltd. and Guinness, claiming that
Anticipation breached his copyrights and accusing the agency of
passing off. The plaintiff's claim for
copyright infringement were based on a passage in the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988defining a
dramatic work as including "recordings of a work of dance or mime", and that
Anticipation was, or included, a copy of a substantial part of
Joy. The case reached the
High Court in 1997, where the claim of passing off was dropped. On 17 July 1998, Justice Rattee rendered his judgment that the jump cutting techniques used in
Joy produced something qualitatively different from a recording of a dance or mime routine and that, as such,
Joy was not in itself a dramatic work. It was therefore defined as an
entrepreneurial work, a status which confers protection over only the physical recording of a work rather than the work itself. He also ruled that
Anticipation did not reproduce either the whole or part of
Joy.
The decision was appealed, but while the
Court of Appeal unanimously held that the content of a film (including the use of film and editing techniques) could enjoy copyright protection as a dramatic work, the presiding Justices ruled that
Anticipation did not significantly copy any portion of
Joy and dismissed the case.
Ultimately, Norowzian was ordered to pay £200,000 in legal costs.
As a result of the case, the
Institute of Contemporary Arts called for reform of copyright law in the United Kingdom.
Legacy
Actor
Joe McKinney spent 1994–6 making personal appearances around Europe publicising Guinness.
The lifestyle became too hectic and he gave up alcohol in 1997.
He found it difficult to secure other roles due to
typecasting as "the Guinness man", spending time in the US where the ad had not been broadcast.
A comparison of two frames from
Anticipation with their respective versions in
Eskimo.
As one of the most recognisable Guinness advertisements of the 1990s,
Anticipation has been mimicked or parodied in a number of more recent Guinness campaigns, including the Irish
Waiting spot in 2004 promoting
cans of Guinness draught beer,
and director JJ Keith's British
Eskimo commercial, which was part of an extended campaign promoting
Guinness Extra Cold in summer 2004 and 2005.
In March 2009, Guinness announced that
Anticipation would be aired again as part of a "Classic Ads" campaign to mark the brewery's 250th anniversary.
Imagination is something Guinness Advertising has never been short of… From John Gilroy’s hapless zookeeper and his menagerie of creatures to a Polynesian surfer and a herd of white horses; from messages in bottles setting sail across the ocean to a single, heart-stoppingly enormous wave. Guinness have been carving out their own creative path for almost a century with decades of extraordinary and enduring print, TV and digital campaigns to their name, and hopefully they will continue to push boundaries to tell stories to the world. Here’s to original thinking !