Cog (television commercial)

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The Cog was a dramatic television advert for the Honda Accord, made (almost completely) without any CGI or trick photography. It was created in 2003 by the London office of advertising agency Wieden+Kennedy.

The two-minute advert appears as a single, long camera dolly along a Rube Goldberg machine chain reaction arrangement of parts from the car but is in fact two stitched together[1], the join being at the moment where the muffler/exhaust box rolls across the floor (this can be seen by watching the floor pattern change). The advert took 606 different takes to complete, and only minuscule CGI was used, simply for fixing the lighting on the final car's window. The cars featured, one disassembled for the pieces and the other on the trailer, were two of the six hand-built pre-mass production Accords.[2][3]

The sequence starts with a transmission bearing rolling into a synchro hub. This sets off a cascade of movement; windscreen wipers 'walk' across the floor, valves roll down a bonnet and carefully weighted tires roll uphill. The advert ends when the power door locks on a complete Accord are triggered, causing the hatchback to close, tipping the car off a balanced trailer and into a final pose in front of the camera. The voice of US author Garrison Keillor queries "Isn't it nice... when things just... work?", while the song "Rapper's Delight" by The Sugarhill Gang plays in the background.

The version of the advertisement that originally aired in Australia had an alternate ending that replaces the keyless-entry remote with a seatbelt retractor, which retracts toward the car and allows it to roll forward instead of the hatchback offsetting the balancing of the ramp. (This version of the ad began at the point where the exhaust muffler rolls across the floor.)

According to Snopes, "in May 2003, filmmakers Peter Fischli and David Weiss threatened legal action against Honda over similarities between the Cog advert and The Way Things Go[4], a 30-minute film they produced in 1987 involving '100 feet of physical interactions, chemical reactions, and precisely crafted chaos worthy of Rube Goldberg or Alfred Hitchcock.'"[5]

In 2006, Honda UK continued the crafted theme with a new advertisement for their Civic using a choir as Foley artists.[6]

Contents

A parody of this advert was recently created by the BBC to promote sport on the BBC Local Radio, by using bits found in a football locker room. It finalizes with a kick of a football into a goal.

Others to parody the popular advert include The Number for 118 118, a UK directory enquiries service.

The advert has been widely acclaimed by Australian Media as an effective marketing tool for the Honda brand - spearheaded by Honda's media agency, ZenithOptimedia Melbourne.

A video of similar concept using various pieces of sports equipment was made by New Zealander, Evan Yates as the winning entry to a competition hosted by local television programme, Sportscafe. Sponsored by Vodafone, the Best Sporting Trick competition prize was a trip to the UK to meet English footballer, David Beckham.

An ad for the breakfast cereal Frosties made a similar advert featuring a Rube Goldberg machine involving a bowl having cereal and milk poured into from chain reactions set off by other household objects.

  1. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/thisweek/story/0,12977,946531,00.html
  2. ^ http://www.snopes.com/autos/business/hondacog.asp
  3. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/thisweek/story/0,12977,946531,00.html
  4. ^ http://www.frif.com/cat97/t-z/the_way_.html
  5. ^ http://www.snopes.com/autos/business/hondacog.asp
  6. ^ http://www.honda.co.uk/civic/

Director: Antoine Bardou-Jacquet

Production Company: Partizan Midi Minuit

Agency: Wieden & Kennedy

Agency Producer: Rob Steiner

Agency Creatives: Matt Gooden & Ben Walker

Post Production: The Mill

Producer: Fi Kilroe

Flame: Barnsley

Flame Assistant: Dave Birkill

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