Cannes Lions

#StopThisMovie - Genocide in Burundi

WE ARE SOCIAL, Paris / FIDH (INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS) / 2017

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Overview

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OVERVIEW

Description

Films like Hotel Rwanda, The Last King of Scotland, based on true stories, have captured the interest of millions. However, outside of cinema, African conflicts are less captivating for the general public. How can we raise awareness about tragedies being written in real life? To get people to react before another catastrophe happens, FIDH anticipated the worst possible scenario with “Genocide in Burundi” a trailer to a fake movie; the first movie whose release you must stop. The video, created in the style of numerous films based on African tragedies was set out as a real movie trailer. The campaign, with a powerful call to action #StopThisMovie, has been created to showcase a powerful message that if the situation in Burundi continues to deteriorate, this fictional trailer could become a real life movie in the not so distant future and became the only movie you wouldn’t want to see.

Execution

The launch of the film employs all of the marketing techniques of a traditional blockbuster film: world premieres in Paris and New York, a showing of the trailer on a giant screen in Times Square, as well as in numerous cinemas, a digital and social media campaign that borrowed the language and culture of cinema fans and drove conversation. Set out as a real movie trailer, Genocide in Burundi has a page on cinema platform AlloCiné - IMDB’s European equivalence- where cinema fans could discover the trailer, the awards (“Worst Scenario Film Festival”, “Golden Bloodbath Award”, backstage secrets (“abuse of power”, “carte blanche to torture & kill”, “incitement to hatred”), along with featuring the government’s key people in the casting section and an interview with a survivor. Additionally, FIDH has called out to a number of international public figures with personalized messages to encourage them to tweet #StopThisMovie.

Outcome

The campaign generated international awareness around the alarming burundese situation in social media and most of all grabbed the attention of the international community.

The trailer was seen 2 million times, the campaign generated press coverage in 56 countries and most of all drove conversations with over twenty thousand tweets. Under the unwanted media pressure, Burundi's spokesman launched the distasteful hashtag #ThisIsMyGenocide. Supposedly created to mock the FIDHs' warning of a risk of genocide the hashtag was used to portray that nothing was happening in Burundi. His attitude however prompted the people of Burundi to no longer keep their mouths shut and express their outrage over the government’s remarks. 7 days later, FIDH was invited to argue its cause at the United Nations.

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