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Flat Eric - An Icon - The History The character was based on a design by French artist Mr. Oizo (aka Quentin Dupieux). Mr. Oizo had created and built a character called Stephane. Stephane was almost identical to Flat Eric; the only differance was Stephane had ears and his hands were fixed. Stephane had appeared in some earlier short films by Mr. Oizo, and had a small cult following in the the UK and France. In 1999, Levi's decided to build a television commercial campaign around the puppet, to be directed by Oizo. The character was renamed Eric, a more "international name," in contrast to the original French name Stephane. The original concepts for the initial ad was to have Eric's head get run over by a car giving him a flat head. That idea was later dropped, but the name Flat Eric stuck. Levi's hired the Jim Henson Company to build Flat Eric based on the original design of Stephane (with some minor changes and upgrades). Mr. Oizo directed all the Flat Eric commercials and performed the music for the ads (with his songs "Flat Beat" and "Monday Massacre"). He commented on the collaboration with Henson: The Levi's ads took three days to shoot. The original short films made with Stephane cost around 15,000 francs to produce. The two Levi's ads cost around two or three million each. Flat Eric was also featured in Mr. Oizo's music video for "Flat Beat", and appeared as a prop in first season of the 2001-2003 original BBC comedy 'The Office'. The rights to the character are retained by Oizo. Videos , trailer clips and images are free for download here. Check out the Mr Oizo page here.
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