The best brand films not only move audiences but also products off the shelf: Titus Upputuru on blurring cinema and advertising

The Advertising Club Madras recently hosted another compelling edition of #AdTalk, a platform that regularly brings the industry’s most influential voices face-to-face with the creative community. This session featured Titus Upputuru, Founder & Filmmaker at The Titus Upputuru Company.
An award-winning filmmaker and one of India’s most celebrated creative voices in advertising and cinema, Titus has built a career on crafting evocative, human-centred narratives that linger long after the first viewing. His talk, “Cinevertising: Blurring the Lines Between Cinema and Advertising”, was less a lecture and more a deep, reflective conversation about how storytelling in advertising is evolving — and how the boundaries between art and commerce are increasingly dissolving.
Over the course of his session, Titus unpacked his philosophy, shared behind-the-scenes insights, and challenged the audience to think beyond formats and towards the deeper emotional truths that connect brand stories with human experience.
From Selling Products to Telling Stories
Titus began by exploring the DNA of both advertising and cinema. On paper, their purposes appear different — one aims to sell a product or service, the other to entertain or provoke thought. Yet, at their core, both are about communication, and both can be deeply emotional experiences.
“When you touch a human emotion, you’re already in the territory of cinema,” Titus explained. Advertising, he argued, is no longer confined to being a transactional message delivery system. The best brand communications today operate like short films, built with arcs, characters, tension, and release — all hallmarks of cinematic storytelling.
Beyond Thirty Seconds: The Rise of Cinematic Brand Worlds
For decades, the thirty-second spot was advertising’s primary currency. But with the proliferation of digital platforms, those rigid boundaries have melted. “You can now tell a story that takes the time it needs,” Titus said, pointing to a shift towards brand films, multi-part series, and even immersive brand universes.
This creative freedom, however, comes with a caveat. “You can’t just make something long because you can,” he cautioned. “Every second must be earned. The audience is giving you their time — it’s the most precious thing they have.”
In his own work, Titus has embraced this challenge, producing films that give space for emotional build-up without losing sight of the brand’s role. These works are not “ads that look like films,” but genuine stories in which the brand lives naturally, without disrupting the narrative flow.
Craft Meets Commerce
One of the central tensions in cinevertising, Titus acknowledged, is balancing artistic ambition with commercial objectives. He stressed that while craft is essential — in writing, direction, cinematography, and music — the brand’s intent must remain clear.
“The perfect piece is when commerce and craft are married in such a way that neither feels compromised,” he said. When done right, the audience doesn’t feel they’re being sold to; they feel they’re experiencing something of value. The brand message, in such cases, becomes part of the emotional takeaway rather than an intrusive add-on.
Titus illustrated this with examples where campaigns resonated so deeply that people remembered not just the narrative but also the brand that enabled it. This, he argued, is the ultimate win in the space where cinema and advertising meet.
The Currency of Emotional Truth
More than visuals, editing, or even performance, what defines a great piece of Cinevertising, according to Titus, is emotional truth.
“Whether your story is two hours or two minutes, the emotional core must be authentic,” he said. Audiences, he believes, have an innate ability to sense when a story is manufactured versus when it springs from something real.
He urged creatives to mine their own lives and observations for moments of love, grief, humour, and hope. “Life,” he said, “gives us the most potent material. Use it.” The reason cinematic advertising works, he suggested, is because it operates on universal human experiences — moments that cross cultures and geographies.
Why the Medium Doesn’t Matter — The Mindset Does
One of the myths Titus sought to dismantle was that advertising and cinema are separate worlds, each with its own rules. In his view, the best work emerges when creators refuse to be constrained by such distinctions.
“Don’t think in terms of ‘ad’ or ‘film’,” he told the audience. “Think in terms of story. If the story is strong, it can live in any medium — on a cinema screen, a mobile phone, or a billboard.”
This, he suggested, is particularly vital in a time when audiences consume content across platforms, often without consciously differentiating between commercial and non-commercial storytelling. For the viewer, the only metric that matters is whether it moves them.
The Takeaway: Respect the Audience, Earn Their Time
Titus’s final message to the gathering was both simple and profound: respect your audience.
“The moment they feel manipulated, you’ve lost them,” he warned. But if they feel respected — if they believe their time has been rewarded with something worth remembering — they will give the brand their attention, loyalty, and even advocacy.
He called on agencies, filmmakers, and brands to aim higher, to strive for stories that transcend the medium and become part of cultural conversation. “That’s when the magic happens,” he concluded, leaving the audience with an unshakable sense of the possibilities that lie ahead for Indian advertising.
A Session that Resonated Beyond the Room
The conversation was more than an exploration of a creative philosophy — it was a call to arms for the entire industry. Titus Upputuru’S own journey, straddling the worlds of advertising and cinema, makes him uniquely positioned to speak about their convergence. His belief that brands can create lasting cultural artefacts — not just campaigns — resonated strongly with attendees, many of whom left with ideas already sparking.
In an era where attention is fragmented and audiences are spoilt for choice, the principles of Cinevertising offer a way forward: stories anchored in emotional truth, told with craft, and delivered with respect for the audience’s intelligence and time. As Titus reminded everyone, when cinema and advertising join forces with authenticity at their core, the result can be nothing short of magical.