Films, which promote goods, are nothing new (today, you just can’t imagine a feature Hollywood film without the product placement), and non-cinema brands often come up with their own film series to entertain their consumers and introduce new product at the same time. Inspired by other brands including Toshiba, Target shot a film dubbed “Falling for You” starring Kristen Bell, Nia Long and Zachary Burr Abel to promote around of 110 Target-exclusive items, which will appear on the screen during the three webisodes. Since it’s not just another movie, but an innovative disguised catalogue, all the goods from pencil holders and apparel to furniture pieces and linen can be moved to a virtual shopping cart, plus they can be easily shared by viewers via social media channels with a click of a mouse button. The 12-minute film will launch at the dedicated pagefallingforyou.target.com tomorrow, October 2.

To promote its new NX smart camera range in the UK, Samsung Electronics is launching an integrated campaign backed by one of the best British photographers David Bailey (David Royston Bailey, born 1938), which aims to ‘democratise photography’ by proving that anyone can take amazing photos like Bailey with a Samsung NX camera.

Hot on the heels of the recent success of the «Our Food. Your Questions» interactive platform launched by McDonald’s Canada in a bid to become even more transparent, honest and closer to consumers, the company now is amplifying the online activities on the site and Facebook app with an advertising campaign. It includes 30-second TV spot, digital takeovers, wild postings, full motion video projections and transit dominations in key markets across Canada.

Red Bull not just gives you wings, as a famous ad says, but has been experimenting with skydiving in stratosphere. Back in 2010, the brand announced the launch of a bold project Red Bull Stratos in collaboration with a courageous Austrian sky jumper and aviation pioneer Felix Baumgartner, who was to undertake a stratospheric balloon flight to more than 120,000 feet (36,576 meters) and make a record-breaking freefall jump in the attempt to become the first man to break the speed of sound (864 kilometers per hour).