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View Full Version : This is a TOTAL WILD TRIP!!!



freakazoid
04-15-2006, 07:46 PM
The new Honda commercial- (link at the end):

There are no computer graphics or digital tricks in the film.

Everything you see really happened in real time exactly as you see it.

The film took 606 takes. On the first 605 takes, something, usually very minor, didn't work.

They would then have to set the whole thing up again. The crew spent weeks shooting night and day. By the time it was over, they were ready to change professions. The film cost six million dollars and took three months to complete including full engineering of the sequence.

In addition, it's two minutes long so every time Honda airs the film on British television, they're shelling out enough dough to keep any one of us in clover for a lifetime.

However, it is fast becoming the most downloaded advertisement in Internet history.

Honda executives figure the ad will soon pay for itself simply in "free viewings" (Honda isn't paying a dime to have you watch this commercial!). When the ad was pitched to senior executives, they signed off on it immediately without any hesitation - including the costs.

There are six and only six hand-made Honda Accords in the world. To the horror of Honda engineers, the filmmakers disassembled two of them to make the film.

Everything you see in the film (aside from the walls, floor, ramp, and complete Honda Accord) is parts from those two cars. The voiceover is Garrison Keillor. When the ad was shown to Honda executives, they liked it and commented on how amazing computer graphics have gotten.

They fell off their chairs when they found out it was for real.

Oh, and about those funky windshield wipers. On the new Accords, the windshield wipers have water sensors and are designed to start doing their thing automatically as soon as they become wet. It looks a bit weird in the commercial.

http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/honda.php

Brains_Behind_Operation
04-15-2006, 08:07 PM
wow, cool comercial. But I don't believe that this is completely real. I can excuse the fact that it appeared to be mostly digital animation because the video has been condensed to run smoothly over the internet. But there is a portion where you find a group of tires bumping into one another, pushing them UP a ramp. Unless that portion was shot in extreme slow motion there is no way that they could have pulled that little trick off. None of those tires had nearly enough momentum or velocity to force any other tires up the ramp, much less to simply get them moving as far as they did in the same direction without an incline. Still, cool comercial.

Nobody
04-16-2006, 11:59 PM
wow, cool comercial. But I don't believe that this is completely real. I can excuse the fact that it appeared to be mostly digital animation because the video has been condensed to run smoothly over the internet. But there is a portion where you find a group of tires bumping into one another, pushing them UP a ramp. Unless that portion was shot in extreme slow motion there is no way that they could have pulled that little trick off. None of those tires had nearly enough momentum or velocity to force any other tires up the ramp, much less to simply get them moving as far as they did in the same direction without an incline. Still, cool comercial.
If the inside of the tire was weighted, it could stand stable, then when bumped, the weight pulls it to the next tire. Its possible to happen in real time. Watch when the second tire stops, after it hits the third tire.( Just before the picture is out of frame).

tommygun
07-22-2006, 12:05 AM
hahahahahaha

melanie
07-22-2006, 12:19 AM
i agree. the ad is so cool!

General Septem
07-22-2006, 11:24 PM
Wow, that's pretty awesome. I'm glad I didn't see this commercial a week ago, because I might've pushed to buy an Accord instead. :D

I love my '04 Ion though. <3

beelzebub
07-23-2006, 08:52 AM
This is an amazing commercial. I really enjoyed it.

However, I do think that CG was involved. The scene with tires that rolled up the ramps must have been fake. The object that struck the first one did not have enough inertia & mass to displace the first tire, which displaced the second and so on. The slope seemed too great to have such a heavy object roll up it.

General Septem
07-23-2006, 04:01 PM
I think the tires were weighted in one spot. They'd be positioned so that the weights were on top, and when nudged they'd just roll into the next one. If you look at the second to last one, you see it bouncing backwards a little bit before rolling forwards again, to stop 180 degrees from where it started, which is where the weight would've been.

General Septem
07-23-2006, 04:38 PM
By the way, there was actually CG used, but only to fix the lighting on the finished car's window. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cog_%28television_commercial%29

freakazoid
07-23-2006, 05:24 PM
By the way, there was actually CG used, but only to fix the lighting on the finished car's window. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cog_%28television_commercial%29
Really, so that is all they used? Cool. Filming it must have been hell! On the 507th take, almost there, almost there, almost there!! Damn!!! One small screw up!! Oh well, start over! :D OK, get set up for take 508!

General Septem
07-23-2006, 05:29 PM
I wonder how much Honda ended up paying for this commercial when all was said and done. The nice thing about this commercial is that they incorporated a lot of the Accord's special features into it.

freakazoid
07-24-2006, 09:30 PM
I wonder how much Honda ended up paying for this commercial when all was said and done. The nice thing about this commercial is that they incorporated a lot of the Accord's special features into it.

Somewhere, not sure, but I heard the figure of well over a million dollars tossed around, but I'm not sure. I wouldn't doubt it though, if not more. I just watched it again and I'm still blown away! :eek: