AIDES is described as a leading association in the fight against HIV/AIDS in France and Europe, with a long-running focus on both rights and prevention.
One of its prevention messages is delivered through a short film by TBWA\Paris called “A Life.”
A life story told in reverse
The film is structured as a life narrated backwards. It starts with old age and rewinds through the expected milestones. Family, love, travel, the sense of a full life. Then the rewind lands on a single moment in youth where HIV enters the story, and the future we just witnessed is revealed as the life that will not happen.
In public-health communications, prevention messages compete with fatigue and stigma, so narrative devices have to create attention without sounding like a lecture.
Why the reversal hits harder than a warning
The real question is how to make a familiar prevention warning feel personal enough to interrupt complacency.
Instead of describing risk, the spot makes the consequence legible as absence. It turns prevention from “avoid a bad outcome” into “protect the life you think you are going to have.” The backwards structure keeps the viewer engaged because it feels like a human story first, and only becomes a prevention message at the moment the timeline snaps into focus.
Extractable takeaway: If your message is easy to ignore in abstract form, anchor it in a relatable future, then reveal the single preventable turning point that removes that future.
What the campaign is trying to change
The intent is not awareness of HIV as a concept. It is behavior. That is the stronger strategic move, because the film is built to influence a decision, not just to restate a known risk. Use protection, and treat the decision as something that safeguards years, not minutes. The creative also avoids positioning people living with HIV as “other.” It focuses on a moment anyone can recognize. A choice made early that reshapes everything later.
What to steal for prevention and behavior-change work
- Start with a human narrative. Let the viewer lean in before you reveal the message.
- Make the consequence concrete. Show what disappears, not just what might happen.
- Link the call-to-action to identity. “Protect your life” often motivates more than “avoid a disease.”
- Use one clear turning point. A single, memorable moment is easier to recall than a list of risks.
A few fast answers before you act
What is the core creative device in “A Life”?
A backwards life narration that rewinds from old age to youth, then reveals the preventable moment where HIV changes the future that was just described.
What behavior is the film trying to encourage?
Prevention, especially the consistent use of protection, by reframing it as protecting your future rather than reacting to fear.
Why does telling the story in reverse work?
It sustains attention and makes the twist meaningful. The viewer first invests in a life they recognize, then understands what is at stake when that life is taken away.
What should a marketer avoid when using a similar approach?
Over-explaining the moral. The power comes from the reveal. If you add heavy-handed copy, you reduce the emotional clarity the structure creates.
When is this structure a good fit?
When a prevention message is well-known but routinely ignored, and you need a fresh device that turns a familiar warning into a personal, memorable stake.
