Not keen. It's a bit confusing to me.
Yes it’s deliberately confusing.
First the Englishness of Martin Parr’s work, the setting etc is not often associated with Saint-Laurent.
And two, the «ordinary » in «An Ordinary Day » is something we are not used to, coming from Saint-Laurent, as they were, for years now, portraiting their non-celebrity campaigns as vapid, languorous, sexually bored, trophy bourgeoises.
It’s a stark contrast with Teller’s girls at Lake Como or even with the last Summer 25 campaign.
I have British friends using «working class » at first degree. They would use that term for this campaign too.
Though I love the brilliant cinematography, I just keep thinking it would have been better suited for a British brand like Burberry.
I admit I like the risk Saint-Laurent is taking by going «artsy » with Parr or Clemente.
But don’t worry, they’ll run traditional fashion campaigns (some might say the next ones are super-archival), alongside with celebrity and artsy campaigns too.