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Old 06-16-2003, 09:55 AM   #1
harleyquinn
Symbol of Cyric
 

Join Date: November 25, 2002
Location: NY
Age: 48
Posts: 1,190
By now, you've probably all seen that Honda Accord commercial where it's a series of one thing kicking off another. I've seen it posted here a few times. If you don't know what I'm talking about, it's pretty cool : http://multimedia.honda-eu.com/accord

Anyway, here's some cool facts I found out about this commercial on snopes.com that I thought I'd share!!!

Quote:
The Honda Accord ad, known as "Cog," entailed months of production and design work and another several days of shooting by London's Wieden+Kennedy advertising agency before the finished product was introduced in the UK in April 2003. Most of the information detailed in the e-mail quoted above is confirmed by press articles about the commercial:
There are no computer graphics or digital tricks in the film. Everything you
see really happened in real time exactly as you see it.

One of the more surprising things about the ad is that it was not a
cheat. Although it would have been much easier to fiddle the chain of
events by using computer graphics, the seesaw and shunt of events really
did happen, and in one, clean take.

Wieden+Kennedy staffers swear that no trick photography was used and that
the final successful run-through was filmed in real time. The only voice
in the ad is from Garrison Keillor, who intones at the end, "Isn't it
nice when things just work?"

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.

Six hundred and six takes it took, and if they had been forced to do a
607th it is probable, if not downright certain, that one of the film crew
would have snapped and gone mad. On the first 605 occasions something
small, usually infuriatingly minute, went just slightly awry and the
whole delicate arrangement was wrecked.

In the course of a week in a Paris studio, crews agonized through 605
takes. Every time, something went wrong — a rolling gear missed its mark,
the oil can poured too much or too little oil, the disembodied windshield
wipers did not come to life with a squirt of liquid as planned. Finally,
on the 606th take, the amazing assembly worked.

Although no special effects were employed, the 606th take wasn't so
absolutely perfect that the entire commercial was derived from that one
take:

The Honda ad was created without special effects. It was split into two
continuous takes only because no studio was big enough to accommodate the
entire sequence. The only post-production trickery is the lighting on the
car doors at the end.

The sequence of events in the advert is actually split into two shots —
shooting the whole thing in one go would have been too expensive. "It was
a damage limitation idea to snip it into two [parts]," says Rob Steiner,
head of television at Wieden & Kennedy, the agency responsible for the
advert. (Still not found the join? The first section ends and the second
one begins at the one minute mark when an exhaust box rolls off to the
right of the screen. Some clever editing bridges the two parts.)

The crew spent weeks shooting night and day. The film cost six million
dollars and took three months to complete including a full engineering of
the sequence.

We couldn't confirm the $6 million figure (possibly it's a misreading of the
report that the entire advertising campaign cost £6 million), and news
articles indicate the entire production was considerably more than three
months in the planning:

Filming was done over four near-sleepless days in a Paris studio, after
one month of script approval, two months of concept drawings and a
further four months of development and testing.

It took five months of production and design work before "Cog" was ready
to shoot. Then the real work began. In the course of a week in a Paris
studio, crews agonized through 605 takes.

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. 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!).

We couldn't find any information about how much Honda pays to air this commercial on TV (ad rates would vary depending upon a variety of factors anyway), but the Daily Telegraph gave the total cost of the ad campaign as £6 million. As the message notes, Honda is probably more than making up for their large investment with all the publicity the commercial is generating:
Since the ad broke on April 6, visits to Honda's Web site have quadrupled, and calls to the contact center have tripled.3
When the ad was pitched to senior executives, they signed off on it immediately without any hesitation — including the costs.
The corporate suits at Honda liked the idea immediately, despite the high costs of production and the fact that it was more than twice as long, and therefore twice as pricey, as normal car ads.1
There are six and only six hand-made Accords in the world. To the horror of Honda engineers, the filmmakers disassembled two of them to make the film.
Two hand-made pre-production Accords — there were only six in existence in the entire world — were needed for the exercise, one of them being ripped apart and cannibalised to the considerable distress of Honda engineers.1
(The two Honda Accords were "hand-assembled" because they were new models, and pre-production versions were the only ones available at the time the commercial was produced.)


Everything you see in the film (aside from the walls, floor, ramp, and complete Honda Accord) are parts from those two cars.

The articles aren't clear on this point, but it sounds like only one of the two hand-made Accords was actually disassembled ("one of them being ripped apart and cannibalised") and much more than just the parts from that one car was used in making the commercial:
By the end of the months-long production, the film had used so many spare parts that two articulated lorries were required to take them away . . . Some of the original ideas, such as one stunt involving an airbag, had to be dropped owing to a shortage of new Accord parts.1
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.
The bigshots at Honda's world headquarters in Japan, when shown Cog for the first time, replied that yes, it was very clever, and how impressive trick photography was these days. When told that it was all real, they were astonished.1
In answer to the most frequently asked question about the commercial:
The sequence where the tyres roll up a slope looks particularly impressive but is very simple. Steiner says that there is a weight [in each] tyre and when the tyre is knocked, the weight is displaced and in an attempt to rebalance itself, the tyre rolls up the slope.4
In May 2003, filmmakers Peter Fischli and David Weiss threatened legal action against Honda over similiarities between the "Cog" commercial and "The Way Things Go," 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."
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