The Batman OnStar commercials were a series of six[1] television commercials featuring comic book superhero Batman, created by ad-agency Campbell-Ewald and aired from 2000 to the beginning of 2002. In 2000, OnStar, DC Comics and Warner Bros. teamed up to promote brand name awareness of the new OnStar onboard guiding system, leading to a large increase in subscribers and a higher rate of subscriber renewals.[2]
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Two of the commercials ("Hot Date" and "Riddle Me This") were directed by Vincent Ward, and the other four were directed by Andrew Davis, working with DoP Thomas Kloss.[3][4] The production company was Millennium Pictures (Detroit), special effects were provided by Flash Film Works, and the scripts were written by Nancy Wellinger and Jim Millis.[5][6] The Batman OnStar commercials helped promote brand name awareness of the system, leading to a large increase in subscribers and a higher rate of susbcriber renewals.[2]
The commercials were shot at the Warner Bros. lot. Flash Film Works did the special effects, including creating and compositing the Batsignal, airbag, the Riddler's skywriting (copying the writing style from Batman Forever) and erasing/covering various shots of the Warner backlot.[5] Back in 1997, John Dykstra chose Flash Film Works to work on the motion picture Batman & Robin. They created a digital matte painting of an ice-laden Gotham City, as well as performing some rig and wire removal work on the film.
OnStar's licensing agreement with DC Comics had additional benefits, as the production teams were given access to DC's creative resources. The advertisements were thus able to use the 'real' Batcave, as well as utilising the Batmobile that was featured in the two Tim Burton-directed Batman films (Batman and Batman Returns). Also featured in the OnStar commercials was composer Danny Elfman's score from the films. The Batsuit that was featured in the commercials was an altered one that George Clooney wore in Batman & Robin.
In addition to set, costume and prop details, DC provided access to footage from the films (in particular, scenes of Batman jumping from a building in "Minor Setbacks" derive from the films) to emphasise the differences between Batman's use of the OnStar system and the more normal mundane usage.[7] In addition to DC having input on the scripts, customer research reminded the company that "Batman always gets the villain," which had apparently been missed.[7]
The actor portraying Batman in the OnStar spots is Bruce Thomas, who also portrayed the Caped Crusader in the pilot for Birds of Prey. Curtis Armstrong portrays the Joker in one of the ads, Vicki Vale is played by Brooke Burns, and the Riddler is played by Brian Stepanek in one of the ads. The commercials are often alleged to have been de facto screentests for director Andrew Davis and actor Bruce Thomas for the then-planned fifth film, after Joel Schumacher's planned Batman Triumphant was dropped after the poor box-office returns and reaction to Batman & Robin. Michael Gough, who portrays Bruce Wayne's butler, Alfred Pennyworth, in the Batman films directed by Tim Burton and Joel Schumacher, reprises his role in the OnStar ads. Thus, Gough portrayed Alfred alongside four different actors portraying Batman: Michael Keaton, Val Kilmer, George Clooney, and Bruce Thomas respectively.
OnStar began a $50 million ad campaign in February 2000, although it is unknown precisely how much of that number was set aside to make the Batman commercials.[8] In 2002, GM dropped Batman as the spokesman, replacing him with radio ads.[7][9]
Following on from OnStar's earliest TV ads playing on childhood fears and out-of-car personal testimonials, the company licenced Batman to market its "year 2000 factory-installed version," in the "world's most technological car," referring to the Batmobile.[7] OnStar marketer Michael McEnaney described the premise as demonstrating that:
The ads demonstrated "examples of possible driving dangers, while remaining in the realm of fantasy," thereby downplaying the "scary side of danger," as well as making the spots "vehicle-neutral at a time when OnStar became available on 29 different GM models."[7]
The six commercials are as follows:
Two special edition Batman comic books were released in conjunction with the ads. The first one was a five-page story featuring the Riddler. The second one was an eight-page story featuring Mr. Freeze.
In addition to print comics, OnStar and DC Comics created a "state-of-the-art animated interactive comic for the Web, at www.onstar.com," which let readers "shape their experience by using Personal Calling and OnStar Virtual Advisor at critical moments in the story."[3]
An oversize, 5" x 3" (when separated at the perforations) trading card set was distributed at trade shows to promote OnStar's vehicle services, using their licensed Batman "sponsor." They were issued as perforated 8-card strips, sealed with tape (and the tape seal cannot be removed without damaging the cards). The back of the cards describe OnStar's services as well as providing contact information. They also give a brief history of Batman from his debut in 1939 through his adding new OnStar tools to the Batmobile in the year 2002.
As part of the ad-campaign, OnStar and DC offered (from May 31, 2001) an online sweepstakes chance to win "a walk-on role in the next Batman movie," which was then "still in the planning stages," albeit "with no firm dates set yet."[3]
A survey showed that 80% of new vehicle owners recognized the brand due to the Batman OnStar commercials.[9] New activations of OnStar service jumped 169% to nearly 300,000 subscribers between January and June 2000. Renewal rate of the service also increased from 32% to 58%.[2] Edward Baig said that the commercials set "lofty expectations" for OnStar service in his review.[13] Further estimates suggest an even higher increase, suggesting that the commercials raised OnStar's customer base by a factor of ten:
The first four commercials won a Silver Award for "Creative Arts - Visual Effects" in the 2000 International Automotive Advertising Awards.[11][14]
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