Inspiration meets innovation at Brandweek, the ultimate marketing experience. Join industry luminaries, rising talent and strategic experts in Phoenix, Arizona this September 23–26 to assess challenges, develop solutions and create new pathways for growth. Register early to save.
There’s a wide range of messy and emotional territory covered in just shy of three minutes in a new campaign from a legacy Swedish brand called Lindex.
It’s a multigenerational story, centered on a mother-daughter rite of passage, that flows from the combative teen years to the relative contentment of middle age, weaving in the joy of birth and the heartache of illness before coming full circle.
By the way, it’s an ad for skivvies.
The 70-year-old Lindex, known for its female empowerment style of marketing, recently launched its latest effort called “Underwear for Life.” The cinematic spot, from decorated director Fiona Jane Burgess and production company Smuggler, departs from the product-focused ads that are common in the category.
“My ambition with this film was to do something unexpected for a lingerie commercial,” Burgess said in a statement. “I wanted to make a short film that spoke to people in a real and relatable way, with humor and familiarity, but also with sensitivity and meaning.”
The work centers on a shopping trip to buy a first bra, an often awkward moment between moms and daughters that’s at once “very ordinary” yet can “hold a lot of significance and meaning,” said Burgess, a veteran of the Mercedes-Benz 2023 campaign for International Women’s Day and groundbreaking ads for female health company Elvie.
“Underwear for Life,” with its gay starring character, then goes into montage mode that includes everything from short- and long-term love affairs, heartbreaks, health scares and hot flashes.