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How Topham Guerin made Boris Johnson’s “Love Actually” ad in 24 hours

Topham Guerin co-founder Ben Guerin tells the inside story of the Conservatives’ 2019 “Love Actually” parody ad: conceived early, shelved, then greenlit at the eleventh hour and delivered in 24 hours, shot with Boris Johnson in two takes. The ad dominated the closing days of a campaign Johnson won with an 80-seat majority.

Published in
bjhguerin.com
By
Ben Guerin
Published
12 December 2024
Type
Opinion
Topics
  • political campaigning
  • creative advertising
  • Brexit

What we argued

  • TG made the Conservatives’ “Love Actually” parody ad for the 2019 UK campaign
  • Greenlit at the 11th hour and produced in 24 hours for broadcast on the BBC
  • Filmed with the PM in two takes; went viral and dominated the closing news agenda
  • Johnson won an 80-seat majority in the 2019 general election

Five years ago today, Boris Johnson secured an 80-seat majority in the 2019 UK general election, and this ad by Topham Guerin earned a place in political advertising history.

Getting the Prime Minister to re-enact that iconic scene from Love Actually was a crazy idea, and one that successfully dominated the news agenda in the final days of the campaign.

What most people don’t know: it almost didn’t happen.

Despite coming up with the idea right at the beginning of the campaign, we shelved it after a Labour candidate released her own version.

It wasn’t until the 11th hour that we got the green light, at which point we only had 24 hours to deliver a fully packaged-up ad for the BBC to run on TV.

With the clock ticking, we raced to find a location, actors, props and rent the specialist camera equipment in record time.

Even though we were short for time, we didn’t want to compromise on making the parody as accurate as possible, shot-for-shot.

I think we managed ok... Sean, my TG Co-Founder, made a surprisingly good fill-in for Andrew Lincoln when we were framing the shot!

The only available slot to squeeze in filming with Boris was late on an extremely cold December evening.

The PM came straight from a full-on NATO summit, and our wacky idea for a movie parody scene was the last thing standing between him and going home.

Incredibly, he managed to shoot it in just two takes.

The result? A moment that went viral, dominated headlines, and cut through the noise.

And critically, every frame was relentlessly on message, delivering the campaign’s closing arguments in a novel and attention-grabbing way.

Proof that the best ideas often come together when time is tight and stakes are high.

For me, this will always be a reminder of what’s possible under pressure when you have the right team around you. After all, that’s what we do at Topham Guerin.

“Getting the Prime Minister to re-enact that iconic scene from Love Actually was a crazy idea - and one that successfully dominated the news agenda in the final days of the campaign.”

Ben Guerin

“every frame was relentlessly on message, delivering the campaign’s closing arguments in a novel and attention-grabbing way.”

Ben Guerin
  • 24h from green light to delivery
  • 80 seat majority Johnson won in 2019

Questions & answers

How quickly was the “Love Actually” ad made?

It was conceived early, shelved, then greenlit at the eleventh hour and produced in 24 hours, with Boris Johnson filming his part in two takes.

Why did the ad matter to the 2019 campaign?

It dominated the closing news agenda in the final days of a campaign Johnson won with an 80-seat majority.

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