Nostalgia made me make this, so let me know if you have any memorable childhood ads of your own :) Get the exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ nordvpn.com/PaulET It's completely risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee. Merry Christmas!! I'll see you next year
“The Big ad” (Carlton draught) & “Not Happy Jan” are the two that always come to mind. And well… this ad. I hadn’t seen it for a long time. Brought back memories!
The 2007 Audi R8 commercial: "The slowest car ever built". A beautiful timelapse of the car's production with Simone White's "beep beep song" in the background. I remember watching it with my dad over and over again!
I was in primary school when this ad was on TV. I remember my dad reading in the Herald Sun that there would be an incredible ad on TV at whatever time it was set to air and it's the only time I remember sitting there, waiting for the ad break. At the time, I thought it was the coolest thing I had ever seen. We taped it and I kept watching it over and over. In the age of trick shots and Rube Goldberg machines, it's probably less impressive. But it felt like that was an age where a business paid for 30 seconds and told you the features of their car. This was a business that paid for 120 seconds to delight us.
@@TiffMcGiff Nope, just a fun old memory. Though, I could have sworn the Australian version had an Australian accent at the end. And for some reason my brain says it was around 8pm or 8:30. But if it was during the Brazilian Grand Prix, that would put it between 4 and 6 AM in Australia. My guess is that we probably saw it the next day
I did work at The Mill at the time, while I as leading another project the team next door were working on Honda "Cog" and it was obvious from the start this was one of those rare occasions where agency, client, production, director and everyone else brings their magic and creativity to the max. True poetry in motion.
One of the things I love about the ad is that it manages to communicate the quality of the car's construction through the way the parts look, sound, and move. Things sound crisp, weighty, resonant. They move smoothly, confidently (with the exception of the wipers waddling across the floor). The parts look heavy, shiny, polished. The minimalistic, understated presentation communicates that "this is an ad, and a car, for thoughtful people. Smart people. Like you." From one of the initial test clips you showed at 5:33, I can imagine someone commenting, "I'm not sure we want the product associated with constant sparking and flames..."
"I'm not sure we want the product associated with constant sparking and flames..." I totally understand what you mean. I just thought it was funny that we indeed would feel like associating a car with constant sparking and flames is a bad thing. You know. A car. The thing that has a special mechanism to spark a gazillion times per minute.
I saw this first in the cinema, everyone was chatting and paying no attention, and within seconds silence fell on the whole audience and all were transfixed. Huge cheer when the machine finished.
I miss adverts like this. Quiet. Not just a car in an empty city. Not just some attractive man or woman, talking utter nonsense, trying to sell you perfume.
Of fucking course you miss them, they sell you absolutely fucking nothing. Its just like those “I wish YOU were my teacher!!!” People on youtube No shit you wish they were your teacher. They teach you basically nothing and only show an explosion or something with an extremely basic description
Claim to fame, I was in the ITV control room when it played out. I vividly remember the GP as we lost comms to Brazil because the OB was hit by lightening. I'd forgotten it was the first showing of this advert, but I remember all of us wondering what the hell was this 90-second commercial taking up the entire break.
Those were the days. Doritos did a Mexican standoff one that lasted a whole break that went out late-night. Very cool clout that companies had back then.
Wow, forgot about that, just looked and still got my Cog DVD sitting in a drawer!!! Ordered as a 16 year old after seeing the 30 second version of the ad on TV and being told by a friend that it was possible to get the full version on DVD. I must have watched it a lot of times. Thanks for making this video and reminding me of the existence.
My mum and dad bought an Accord Euro of around this era here in Australia, and on delivery we actually got given a miniDVD with not only the ad, but the making of as well. Such a fascinating watch as a ~10 year old
It would have been done with CGI nowadays. I actually thought it was CGI back when I saw it in mid 2000s. To learn they actually filmed it for real completely blew my mind. It's probably one of the craziest most creative ads ever done yet it's so tranquil and calm. An absolute masterpiece.
there definitely are CG elements in it, look closely at the point where they allegedly sliced the two shots, the reflection follows the muffler as it's rotating, despite it being a fully chrome tip. the physics also don't check out in a couple of places, the muffler's roll, and the handles that are usually mounted above the door. I absolutely believe they filmed it, but there's a lot of VFX magic going on at the same time.
10:52 the ad may have only aired in three markets officially but thanks to the internet in the 2000s the full ad was ripped and converted into an SWF and uploaded to many websites that host Flash games and content before TH-cam was widely adopted as the video distribution platform of choice so its possible someone's mom or dad who never set foot to any of these territories might have seen it from places like ebaumsworld or Y8. i still have my copy from 2008 which i fetched from a long-gone site in my home server. EDIT: Wieden + Kennedy would be hired by Liberty Media more than a decade later to take charge of creating Formula 1's new brand package after the media giant acquired the motorsport from Bernie Ecclestone.
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Indeed, I was studying graphic design back then and the Academy had one of the first continuous internet connections in the country. This was widely shared among students and staff, becoming one of the first viral videos I can remember.
yep. I saw it in Canada when i was starting high school. I had actually downloaded it and had in on my computer and I would watch it over and over in amazement.
@ where were you? I had direct high speed cable internet to my house by ‘95. A blistering 1Mbps up and down. I made low budget music videos and ads and had a client ask to make something like this in 2004. For $20k. I told him we could roll a few tires down a ramp for that. “But what about 3D”? I’ll just call ILM and see what they say…. Now you could probably make it for close to that.
Yeah, this was widely seen in the US, not just on the Internet, but in news broadcasts and on talk shows. It got a lot of what they call "earned media."
To this day this is my No.1 Ad I've ever watched. Surprisingly enough, I saw it for the first time in the half time break during the final of the Champions league in Polish television TVP and it was one and only truly mesmerising experience while watching the ADVERT!! Thank you very much for bringing back this memory and a ton of extra knowledge about it.
Humans will love Rube Goldberg machines till the end of time. They're THAT cool. As an advertising student who's about to start working in the industry soon I hope one day I get to make an ad of this quality and passion.
I’m so happy this popped up in my thread. Subscribed! I’ve worked in this field since the early 90s - here in Australia and the UK. Today a lot of the jobs don’t even exist anymore, replaced by effects artists and AI. This ad today would be able to be created for the coffee budget of the original team. And completed in days instead of months, by one or two people instead of a team. From this you see a different type of craft, passion, commitment and dedication. Nice find and thanks for sharing.
It’s a shame really. CGI always seems to lack something compared to practical effects. Maybe it’s just confirmation bias, but I feel like practical effects are just better. Money-wise though, I can see why they’d prefer to do it with CGI.
Really well put together video as usual -- a small correction: (13:03) Spike Jonze (Her, Being John Malkovich) directed the Lamp IKEA ad, not Spike Lee.
The thing that blows me away is that they did all of that insane stuff to pull it off, and still managed to include some of the car's advertised features throughout as part of the machine. Just, wow.
Great video (subscribed!)….I didn’t scroll through all the comments so apologies if this is a repeat but the reason they did not win at Cannes is that the ad company admitted to cribbing from _The Way Things Go_ the Fischli and Weiss 29 minutes (!!!) art piece…specifically the tires rolling up the ramp sequence
I remember this ad, I remember all of the discussion about it at the time, how many times I rewatched it etc. What I didn't remember was the specific Honda car they were advertising, so imagine my surprised watching the first few minutes of this video, and seeing the car roll down the ramp, and its the same car I have in my driveway right now!
Never seen this ad (I don't live in UK/Aus/Ireland) nor even heard of it. Thanks for putting it here! I love the nostalgia of good quality car ads + the creativity!
Having been one of those people staring at the screen during the f1, wondering what I just saw - I spoke with a producer of cog, and he told me apparently the need for two car versions was one of the reasons why they split the ad in the middle
This ad never aired in my country. I watched it because it was emailed to me as an "extremely awesome video", and I have never forgotten it. As soon as the cogs started rolling, my brain went "oh! this is that cool honda ad." What a masterpiece!
Oh man, you just unearthed a hidden memory for me LOL, I remember being utterly transfixed by this ad, and being hooked on watching these Rube Goldberg machines on TH-cam in the early 2000's. Thanks for the trip.
I used to watch this ad on loop when I was a child, because I had an admiration for how everything was layed out and all interacting with each other. I'm so glad you did a video on this, because I've been wanting to know how they did it for years.
this ad was so good, i had it on a DVD. not sure where i got that DVD from. Interesting to learn how the tyres worked - i always thought that was the bit that was faked. great video.
I saw this ad right around when I first found TH-cam; I was in Elementary school. Now I'm in college studying computer engineering! Crazy to think about how time flies
I just watched a video, about an ad, about a DVD that was about the ad, that was about how the ad was made/shot, but yet it was also all about the ad all along. And I enjoyed every second of it. I must have watched 'Cog' at least 70 times when it came out online. I'll go and watch it again here in a second.
At the time of its release I was living in Los Angeles with my then gf who had just finished her fine arts degree from USC. I remember how mesmerized we were by this ad and how so many of the film students were amazed by it to. I've watched the fill ad hundreds of times. Had it saved on my computer for years. A phenomenal amount of work to get that without digital effects!
I live in Ireland and I remember seeing this ad here on TV and being amazed by it. I saw the short version a fair few times but it was a real bonus to see the full version.
This is an ad that was instantly a classic. I've shown it to countless people. And luckily I got to share it with my wife tonight. Thank you for the deep dive! I was aware there was a hidden cut, but I was not sure where it occurred.
I used to work in recycling and found one of those DVDs that someone had thrown out along with an awful lot of rubbish. Absolutely made sure to rescue it, but where it is now I couldn't say for sure (which may mean I probably did the same thing and eventually sent it for recycling myself). I remember discussing the advert at school, for some media studies related reason no doubt, and then close to a decade later finding out (whilst in the middle of a pile of rubbish) that there was an entire DVD for an advert - a memorable advert, certainly, but surely 'just an advert'...
Absolutely loved your documentary and tribute to Cog. Your script and delivery had great timing and emulated the quiet, composed, respectful atmosphere evoked by the subject.
I don’t know if this has been pointed out, but there’s a 1987 art film called ‘The Way Things Go’ by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, which is remarkably similar to the Honda ad. I’d be amazed if it wasn’t an inspiration, as the format of the film as a long linear take is almost exactly the same. Not to discredit what they did with the Honda ad, which is amazing in its own right.
It even featured the uphill rolling trick of Fischli and Weiss. I'm fairly certain,it is heavily inspired by them. ;) F+W had a problem back in the day, their hall was to short, so they had to use "hidden" cut's. Oh, wait.. :P
@@CiszHelionok thanks, it was a while ago I heard about the fact. There is even a bit about this on Wikipedia: In May 2003, Fischli and Weiss threatened legal action against Honda over similarities between the Cog commercial and The Way Things Go. The artists felt that the ad's creators had "obviously seen" their film and should have consulted them. Fischli and Weiss had refused several requests to use the film for commercial purposes, though Honda claimed that this was irrelevant as their permission was not needed to create new works with some elements similar to their previous works. Honda's advertising firm Wieden+Kennedy eventually admitted to copying a sequence of weighted tires rolling uphill. The controversy was blamed for denying Cog a Grand Prix at the 2004 Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival.[5]
There hasn't been a moment in time before, or since, where I was excited to see an advertisment on the telly. 20 years later, I still remember Cogs fondly.
Great video, sir! This is one of my most favorite ads ever! They may not have played it on television in the US but we (car people) were definitely aware of it back in the day. I definitely miss the days when a company would pay for an epic ad such as this.
It doesn't matter how much BTS footage I watch, for some reason my brain just immediately says "That's cgi" and I don't know why. Is it the frame rate, or the unnaturally smooth lighting, lack of surface imperfections, or that some of the objects move unexpectedly (tires uphill, walking wipers etc)
Goes to say how realistic CGI has become to the point it's hard to tell the difference, most times you only have your gut feel. There's a fundamental in Visual Effects, "Digital Imperfection" is Perfection. That's why CGI's that are "too clean" looks fake. So when something done in real and it's "too clean" our brain just points to "yep, that's CGI". Suffering in success I guess.
+not seeing shadows where you expect to see them +the objects' movements look like a "perfect" physics simulation +the camera moves like if there was no physical restriction / like freely moving in a 3D world +everything is shiny like in an RTX or blender demo +the room itself is incredibly bland, which nowadays might be associated with someone spending effort on a specific part of a demo, and not putting any effort in the background
I went into advertising the very same year this ad was released and even marketing people didn't believe it was real. I always found the upwards rolling wheels weird.
How can this video be called "The story behind..." and not mention Fischli/Weiss. It literally was my first thought when I saw the advert back in the day, in all the details down to the left to right setup. Honestly I always was convinced that this was a very openly tongue-in-cheeck nod to the (back then) quite famous art piece - just with car parts which was the whole pun of the ad. And yes of course every professional in advertising knew and loved the Fischli/Weiss piece at the time. So this was not even an attempt to conceal the fact, it was the whole point.
i just complained about losing 9 minutes before on some other no face channel but Paul... I love what you made here. concise to the point and great editing and story telling! New Subscriber!
i'm a young australian and fondly remember this ad! i don't think i would have seen it aired on tv, but i assume it created enough of a buzz that someone showed me a copy hosted on the internet. super cool breakdown, and from you a top notch video overall, as usual :D
I'm Swedish, and I remember this SO well. It's like a core memory you just opened up for me! I remember; Me, 13-ish old, on the sofa with my dad, both of us *completely* mesmerized and silent the whole time. Thank you for doing this video! It was an amazing one!
It was in the same bucket for me as the series of Sony Bravia ads, one with a clown / exploding paint and the other with some colourful balls bouncing down a street in San Fran. Beautifully done
Was scrolling through the comments to see if anyone mentioned the Fischli and Weiss 29 minutes (!!!) piece…it also why they didn’t win the Cannes prize being the tire rolling up the ramp the ad company admitted to cribbing from The Way Things Go
I remember watching this as a kid and getting my mind absolutely blown that I immediately tried to show it to everybody I know especially my parents haha
One of my favorite ad campaigns was the “White Gold is White Gold” series that culminated into the 22 minute online movie, “Battle for Milkquarius”. So good and hilarious.
I remember having lunch in like 2012 and my brothers were watching TH-cam videos, we were particularly interested in Rube Goldberg Machines, then eventually we came across this ad, it is strange that I wasn't even alive during the Airing of this ad, but I still have nostalgia for this ad. I haven't seen the ad in a while now, but thanks to you I will save this in my nostalgia playlist. Thank You!
I wasn’t around when this aired on tv nor do I live in the right region to watch this, but somehow in the back of my mind I remember my dad showing this to me on facebook when i was around five or six and it was the best thing I had ever seen. Thank you for making videos like this! THE ENDING WAS REAL SPECIAL
I think I saw the full uncut ad on TV, although I might just be piecing together different memories of separate 30 second cuts of each part of it. But I'd definitely remembered each part. There's something about seeing something so surreal and just letting the moment take you, even if it is trying to sell me something.
I was just talking with my other half last week about how these types of creative adds are a thing of the past since we aren’t focused on watching live tv so much anymore. We were talking about how good some of those late 1990’s early 2000’s adds were.
Imagine me watching this thinking "I remember that ad but who would order the DVD of it?" only for you to open the package of that yellow and pink case and it hit me that _I ordered that DVD_. You just unlocked a distant memory. I loved that ad for its simple complexity and loved finding out how it was done.
Love this piece mate! I remember it taking over my imagination as a bright eyed 11 year old. I've always wanted to see what the vertical speakers shot looked like in the raw footage.
Clever central ad. Very nostalgia approved. I remember seeing "Cog" years ago. What a mind blowing leap forward it was in creativity. There was a website I now forget, devoted to advertisers; lots of ads were available there--including some great ones like this one. After a while the website converted to a subscription model, requiring a sign-in to view most of its content. This greatly annoyed my coworkers and me, because we weren't interested in the ins and outs of advertisement--we merely wanted to periodically waste an hour browsing funny commercials.
I knew it was the Honda ad. It’s still breathtaking. My dad and I love Hondas. I still mourn my Aerodeck (passed down from dad) that had over 270,000 miles on the clock and mainly failed its MOT due its underside corroding (we had lived near the coast and it wasn’t garaged). I wish I’d spent tons of money fixing it because I’ve never had a better, more reliable, useful, powerful car before or since. RIP PYM 😢
Everything being on a line in the floor and the parts all being disconnected and bumping into each other reminds me of Peter Fischeli and David Weiss' 1987 "The Way Things Go" Its almost half an hour long so if you enjoy this I highly recommend it
I remember that ad, I watched it for the first time in the cafeteria of my university where I was studying electrical engineering, it was all over the internet at the time... the pre-TH-cam and pre-Facebook era so it was a video file shared via email.
Love the research and work you put into your videos. I'm subscribed to 400 something channels at this point but there's only couple I actually get excited about when I see they've uploaded something.
Here in the UK i remember every time the ad came on everyone would stop to watch it then carry on with whatever they were doing, it was more entertainment than it was an advert.
The only thing that always confused the hell out of me was the tires rolling up the ramp. I remmember being like, "That's not how physics work!" Only to find that it can be done with a weight placed inside the tire that is heavy enough to overcome the incline. Genius! That being said this is hands down the finest commercial ever made.
Another creative ad I know I can sit and watch is ryan reynolds' mint mobile or american gin. His creativity and humour blend so much. Love Cogs. So creative.
Honda had good commercials. My favorite was when you saw a line of white and black cars just going up and down while "As Time Goes By" is played on the piano. The camera pans back, and you realize the cars are moving as the piano keys playing that song would. I don't think it got the attention "Cog" did, but it was simple and beautiful.
Loved this ad i remember watching it on TV back in AU, it was amazing. Its really great that you have been able to preserve that DVD, you should consider reaching out to Honda to see if they would like to make a copy of it for their archives, as its entirely possible that they also dont have a copy. As someone who loves cars, and now works in advertising, it is a shame how so many of these great pieces of creatives were lost. I was lucky to get to be apart of some amazing campaigns for Range Rover that featured jaw dropping stunts, but the simplicity and clarity of the message in cog is amazing. Also its no surprise it didnt win Cannes, nobody from the automotive industry every wins at Cannes!
I still vividly remember seeing cog for the first time during that grand prix, i was on the phone to my brother at the time and slowly realised neither of us had said anything for 30 seconds or so: "er, are you watching the grand prix?..." "Yeah..." "are you seeing this too?.." "Yeah....." "I don't know what they're selling but god damn it I'm in" Our dad had the DVD too, i think in the UK they gave it away free with the Observer newspaper one weekend
I was one of those people who contacted Honda to ask for a copy of the advert. At the time I apologised to them and said that I didn't want one of the cars (couldn't afford it), but also said that I was a nerd who loved the add. They replied that the DVD was on its way to me. I still have it.
The greatest achievements of the marketing team are that they make you forget that you are watching an advertisement for a product, and making you hopeful and excited to watch it again after the first viewing.
As a DJ, all too often a commercial can ruin a song, but Sugarhill Gang associated with this brilliant ad does not. That DVD cover design with the cut out is also brilliant. Never seen anything like that.
As an American, this is the first I've heard of this ad. As far as long ads that we wanted more of, though, we had Terry Tate: Office Linebacker. They actually made sequels to the ad and posted them online.
When this came out you could request a copy of it on DVD. I ordered one straight away. I remember it having a yellow case with pink cog, need to see if its collecting dust somewhere! Honda always had fantadtic adverts back then.
Aw, come on now, who doesn't love a good Wallet Wizard ad? I remember seeing this ad. when it aired. As someone more at home with words than visuals (I'LL decide upon the pictures in my head, thank you very much!), I can remember admiring the sheer elegance of it. I was going through a stripped back phase - written and musically - and this ad. was just perfection. With regard to live TV and commercials, thanks to the utter inanity, their only purpose now is as intermission to go to the toilet and get a drink (not from the same room!) and to ask questions/make comments. A family member who only watches paid streaming channels tells me, "that's what the pause button is for." That implies that the person wanting to talk a) has the remote and/or b) doesn't mind arbitrarily deciding for everyone else present that they all need to have their show interrupted to hear your very important comment. A lot of divorces could be avoided if we all just let the commercials do their job. 😁 (By the way, I hope that when you said you found one of the DVDs, but not one of the 10,000 people who originally wrote away for it, that you meant you actually TRIED to find one of them!) Yes, I know, too wordy, but it's 3am...
if youtube had decent ads like this, id happily remove adblock, and the fact that so many of us are here watching a video about the production of a car ad proves this is true for a lot of us. i remember this ad fondly, along with a handful of others im glad were preserved online, but between all of the outright fraudulent mobile game ads, phishing ads that directly insult your intelligence, and repetitive mind numbing trash, its hard to justify doing so. i strongly believe that platforms need to be made liable for the ads they serve. maybe then they will finally clean up the cesspool they have created.
I accidentally recorded this ad on vhs, I say accidentally because it was randomly in the ad break (if memory serves me right) of a Rove[Live] episode I wanted to record. I remember watching it over and over in disbelief. Between this ad and the Carlton Draught "This is a big ad" is what captivated me in the world of advertising and really enjoying the creativity of these agencies. I'm a creative maker and film lover and one day in the future I want to create practical effects for low budget films as a hobby more than a job, I really think this dream comes from this exact ad.
Nostalgia made me make this, so let me know if you have any memorable childhood ads of your own :)
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Tooheys Extra dry beer - Tongue's Quest.
“The Big ad” (Carlton draught) & “Not Happy Jan” are the two that always come to mind.
And well… this ad. I hadn’t seen it for a long time. Brought back memories!
The 2007 Audi R8 commercial: "The slowest car ever built". A beautiful timelapse of the car's production with Simone White's "beep beep song" in the background. I remember watching it with my dad over and over again!
@@CooperRust Oh man, I had completely forgotten about that one... Iconic, but also creepy as hell.
@@spmryan VE-RY BIG AD
I was in primary school when this ad was on TV. I remember my dad reading in the Herald Sun that there would be an incredible ad on TV at whatever time it was set to air and it's the only time I remember sitting there, waiting for the ad break.
At the time, I thought it was the coolest thing I had ever seen. We taped it and I kept watching it over and over.
In the age of trick shots and Rube Goldberg machines, it's probably less impressive. But it felt like that was an age where a business paid for 30 seconds and told you the features of their car. This was a business that paid for 120 seconds to delight us.
That’s so cool!
Nice fiction 😂
@@TiffMcGiff Nope, just a fun old memory. Though, I could have sworn the Australian version had an Australian accent at the end. And for some reason my brain says it was around 8pm or 8:30. But if it was during the Brazilian Grand Prix, that would put it between 4 and 6 AM in Australia. My guess is that we probably saw it the next day
I did work at The Mill at the time, while I as leading another project the team next door were working on Honda "Cog" and it was obvious from the start this was one of those rare occasions where agency, client, production, director and everyone else brings their magic and creativity to the max. True poetry in motion.
One of the things I love about the ad is that it manages to communicate the quality of the car's construction through the way the parts look, sound, and move. Things sound crisp, weighty, resonant. They move smoothly, confidently (with the exception of the wipers waddling across the floor). The parts look heavy, shiny, polished.
The minimalistic, understated presentation communicates that "this is an ad, and a car, for thoughtful people. Smart people. Like you."
From one of the initial test clips you showed at 5:33, I can imagine someone commenting, "I'm not sure we want the product associated with constant sparking and flames..."
"I'm not sure we want the product associated with constant sparking and flames..."
I totally understand what you mean. I just thought it was funny that we indeed would feel like associating a car with constant sparking and flames is a bad thing. You know. A car. The thing that has a special mechanism to spark a gazillion times per minute.
I saw this first in the cinema, everyone was chatting and paying no attention, and within seconds silence fell on the whole audience and all were transfixed. Huge cheer when the machine finished.
I remember seeing it in cinema too.... in Estonia if anyone’s curious.
I miss adverts like this. Quiet. Not just a car in an empty city. Not just some attractive man or woman, talking utter nonsense, trying to sell you perfume.
Ah the synergy of design and elegance...
They gently tugged at your attention, instead of full force yanking it.
The sad thing is I've never seen an Accord wagon
They are just as common now as they were back then, doesn't mean I don't wish they could come more often
Of fucking course you miss them, they sell you absolutely fucking nothing. Its just like those “I wish YOU were my teacher!!!” People on youtube
No shit you wish they were your teacher. They teach you basically nothing and only show an explosion or something with an extremely basic description
Claim to fame, I was in the ITV control room when it played out. I vividly remember the GP as we lost comms to Brazil because the OB was hit by lightening. I'd forgotten it was the first showing of this advert, but I remember all of us wondering what the hell was this 90-second commercial taking up the entire break.
That’s awesome. That GP was pure chaos.
Those were the days. Doritos did a Mexican standoff one that lasted a whole break that went out late-night. Very cool clout that companies had back then.
Wow, forgot about that, just looked and still got my Cog DVD sitting in a drawer!!! Ordered as a 16 year old after seeing the 30 second version of the ad on TV and being told by a friend that it was possible to get the full version on DVD. I must have watched it a lot of times. Thanks for making this video and reminding me of the existence.
I've got one somewhere...
My mum and dad bought an Accord Euro of around this era here in Australia, and on delivery we actually got given a miniDVD with not only the ad, but the making of as well. Such a fascinating watch as a ~10 year old
It would have been done with CGI nowadays. I actually thought it was CGI back when I saw it in mid 2000s. To learn they actually filmed it for real completely blew my mind. It's probably one of the craziest most creative ads ever done yet it's so tranquil and calm. An absolute masterpiece.
there definitely are CG elements in it, look closely at the point where they allegedly sliced the two shots, the reflection follows the muffler as it's rotating, despite it being a fully chrome tip. the physics also don't check out in a couple of places, the muffler's roll, and the handles that are usually mounted above the door. I absolutely believe they filmed it, but there's a lot of VFX magic going on at the same time.
@@chonkusdonkus they used parts weighed in the right way for them to roll in expected way (like the wheels)
@@mikosoft I didn't mention the wheels, they're obviously just weighted unevenly
10:52 the ad may have only aired in three markets officially but thanks to the internet in the 2000s the full ad was ripped and converted into an SWF and uploaded to many websites that host Flash games and content before TH-cam was widely adopted as the video distribution platform of choice so its possible someone's mom or dad who never set foot to any of these territories might have seen it from places like ebaumsworld or Y8. i still have my copy from 2008 which i fetched from a long-gone site in my home server.
EDIT: Wieden + Kennedy would be hired by Liberty Media more than a decade later to take charge of creating Formula 1's new brand package after the media giant acquired the motorsport from Bernie Ecclestone.
Indeed, I was studying graphic design back then and the Academy had one of the first continuous internet connections in the country. This was widely shared among students and staff, becoming one of the first viral videos I can remember.
yep. I saw it in Canada when i was starting high school. I had actually downloaded it and had in on my computer and I would watch it over and over in amazement.
@ where were you? I had direct high speed cable internet to my house by ‘95. A blistering 1Mbps up and down.
I made low budget music videos and ads and had a client ask to make something like this in 2004. For $20k. I told him we could roll a few tires down a ramp for that. “But what about 3D”? I’ll just call ILM and see what they say….
Now you could probably make it for close to that.
That's where I recognized it from! Good ol' Flash days!
Yeah, this was widely seen in the US, not just on the Internet, but in news broadcasts and on talk shows. It got a lot of what they call "earned media."
To this day this is my No.1 Ad I've ever watched. Surprisingly enough, I saw it for the first time in the half time break during the final of the Champions league in Polish television TVP and it was one and only truly mesmerising experience while watching the ADVERT!! Thank you very much for bringing back this memory and a ton of extra knowledge about it.
I recommend watching "big ad" it's a beer commercial.
Humans will love Rube Goldberg machines till the end of time. They're THAT cool. As an advertising student who's about to start working in the industry soon I hope one day I get to make an ad of this quality and passion.
I’m so happy this popped up in my thread. Subscribed! I’ve worked in this field since the early 90s - here in Australia and the UK. Today a lot of the jobs don’t even exist anymore, replaced by effects artists and AI. This ad today would be able to be created for the coffee budget of the original team. And completed in days instead of months, by one or two people instead of a team. From this you see a different type of craft, passion, commitment and dedication. Nice find and thanks for sharing.
It’s a shame really. CGI always seems to lack something compared to practical effects. Maybe it’s just confirmation bias, but I feel like practical effects are just better. Money-wise though, I can see why they’d prefer to do it with CGI.
Really well put together video as usual -- a small correction: (13:03) Spike Jonze (Her, Being John Malkovich) directed the Lamp IKEA ad, not Spike Lee.
Ah bugga - thank you for letting me know :)
@@paul_et cheers
The thing that blows me away is that they did all of that insane stuff to pull it off, and still managed to include some of the car's advertised features throughout as part of the machine.
Just, wow.
Great video (subscribed!)….I didn’t scroll through all the comments so apologies if this is a repeat but the reason they did not win at Cannes is that the ad company admitted to cribbing from _The Way Things Go_ the Fischli and Weiss 29 minutes (!!!) art piece…specifically the tires rolling up the ramp sequence
I had never even heard about this advertisement before. Thanks for making the world a better place by sharing it with us all! 😊
The way you explain things is so good! respect for spending so much time on videos. You inspire me to get into the film business
I'd never made the connection before, but I bet this was the main inspiration behind OK Go's "This Too Shall Pass" video.
I remember this ad, I remember all of the discussion about it at the time, how many times I rewatched it etc. What I didn't remember was the specific Honda car they were advertising, so imagine my surprised watching the first few minutes of this video, and seeing the car roll down the ramp, and its the same car I have in my driveway right now!
I love this car, I've had two of them. The later one had 415000 km. on it when I traded it a few months ago.
Never seen this ad (I don't live in UK/Aus/Ireland) nor even heard of it. Thanks for putting it here! I love the nostalgia of good quality car ads + the creativity!
Having been one of those people staring at the screen during the f1, wondering what I just saw - I spoke with a producer of cog, and he told me apparently the need for two car versions was one of the reasons why they split the ad in the middle
This ad never aired in my country. I watched it because it was emailed to me as an "extremely awesome video", and I have never forgotten it. As soon as the cogs started rolling, my brain went "oh! this is that cool honda ad." What a masterpiece!
Oh man, you just unearthed a hidden memory for me LOL, I remember being utterly transfixed by this ad, and being hooked on watching these Rube Goldberg machines on TH-cam in the early 2000's. Thanks for the trip.
I used to watch this ad on loop when I was a child, because I had an admiration for how everything was layed out and all interacting with each other. I'm so glad you did a video on this, because I've been wanting to know how they did it for years.
this ad was so good, i had it on a DVD. not sure where i got that DVD from. Interesting to learn how the tyres worked - i always thought that was the bit that was faked. great video.
oh, you answered it! cool!
I saw this ad right around when I first found TH-cam; I was in Elementary school.
Now I'm in college studying computer engineering! Crazy to think about how time flies
I just watched a video, about an ad, about a DVD that was about the ad, that was about how the ad was made/shot, but yet it was also all about the ad all along.
And I enjoyed every second of it. I must have watched 'Cog' at least 70 times when it came out online. I'll go and watch it again here in a second.
At the time of its release I was living in Los Angeles with my then gf who had just finished her fine arts degree from USC. I remember how mesmerized we were by this ad and how so many of the film students were amazed by it to. I've watched the fill ad hundreds of times. Had it saved on my computer for years. A phenomenal amount of work to get that without digital effects!
I live in Ireland and I remember seeing this ad here on TV and being amazed by it. I saw the short version a fair few times but it was a real bonus to see the full version.
This is an ad that was instantly a classic. I've shown it to countless people. And luckily I got to share it with my wife tonight. Thank you for the deep dive! I was aware there was a hidden cut, but I was not sure where it occurred.
I used to work in recycling and found one of those DVDs that someone had thrown out along with an awful lot of rubbish. Absolutely made sure to rescue it, but where it is now I couldn't say for sure (which may mean I probably did the same thing and eventually sent it for recycling myself). I remember discussing the advert at school, for some media studies related reason no doubt, and then close to a decade later finding out (whilst in the middle of a pile of rubbish) that there was an entire DVD for an advert - a memorable advert, certainly, but surely 'just an advert'...
Absolutely loved your documentary and tribute to Cog. Your script and delivery had great timing and emulated the quiet, composed, respectful atmosphere evoked by the subject.
Also wanted to recognise the research and preparation you did for this, and its contribution to the production. Brilliant work!
I don’t know if this has been pointed out, but there’s a 1987 art film called ‘The Way Things Go’ by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, which is remarkably similar to the Honda ad.
I’d be amazed if it wasn’t an inspiration, as the format of the film as a long linear take is almost exactly the same.
Not to discredit what they did with the Honda ad, which is amazing in its own right.
It even featured the uphill rolling trick of Fischli and Weiss. I'm fairly certain,it is heavily inspired by them. ;)
F+W had a problem back in the day, their hall was to short, so they had to use "hidden" cut's. Oh, wait.. :P
@@CiszHelionok thanks, it was a while ago I heard about the fact. There is even a bit about this on Wikipedia:
In May 2003, Fischli and Weiss threatened legal action against Honda over similarities between the Cog commercial and The Way Things Go.
The artists felt that the ad's creators had "obviously seen" their film and should have consulted them. Fischli and Weiss had refused several requests to use the film for commercial purposes, though Honda claimed that this was irrelevant as their permission was not needed to create new works with some elements similar to their previous works.
Honda's advertising firm Wieden+Kennedy eventually admitted to copying a sequence of weighted tires rolling uphill.
The controversy was blamed for denying Cog a Grand Prix at the 2004 Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival.[5]
@@btn237 Good find. :D
There hasn't been a moment in time before, or since, where I was excited to see an advertisment on the telly. 20 years later, I still remember Cogs fondly.
Great video, sir! This is one of my most favorite ads ever! They may not have played it on television in the US but we (car people) were definitely aware of it back in the day.
I definitely miss the days when a company would pay for an epic ad such as this.
I've always love well-crafted commercials, as well as Rube Goldberg machines, so naturally this was one of my favorites. ❤
The ASMR aspect is great, the sounds are very calming. And ASMR as a genre didn’t even exist back then.
I definitely remember seeing the whole version in Australia. For some reason it was the wind windows I remember the most. Great video
Thanks for making this. It’s fun to think there was so much enjoyment that came from this commercial. Wish we could have more.
It doesn't matter how much BTS footage I watch, for some reason my brain just immediately says "That's cgi" and I don't know why. Is it the frame rate, or the unnaturally smooth lighting, lack of surface imperfections, or that some of the objects move unexpectedly (tires uphill, walking wipers etc)
Goes to say how realistic CGI has become to the point it's hard to tell the difference, most times you only have your gut feel.
There's a fundamental in Visual Effects, "Digital Imperfection" is Perfection. That's why CGI's that are "too clean" looks fake.
So when something done in real and it's "too clean" our brain just points to "yep, that's CGI". Suffering in success I guess.
+not seeing shadows where you expect to see them
+the objects' movements look like a "perfect" physics simulation
+the camera moves like if there was no physical restriction / like freely moving in a 3D world
+everything is shiny like in an RTX or blender demo
+the room itself is incredibly bland, which nowadays might be associated with someone spending effort on a specific part of a demo, and not putting any effort in the background
Those speakers have to be cgi.
@@battlebong869 Yeah i was gonna say, they don't look legit at all
I went into advertising the very same year this ad was released and even marketing people didn't believe it was real. I always found the upwards rolling wheels weird.
How can this video be called "The story behind..." and not mention Fischli/Weiss. It literally was my first thought when I saw the advert back in the day, in all the details down to the left to right setup.
Honestly I always was convinced that this was a very openly tongue-in-cheeck nod to the (back then) quite famous art piece - just with car parts which was the whole pun of the ad.
And yes of course every professional in advertising knew and loved the Fischli/Weiss piece at the time. So this was not even an attempt to conceal the fact, it was the whole point.
I came across this ad several times on youtube and never thought it was shot in real life.
It's one of the few real life videos that look like CG.
i just complained about losing 9 minutes before on some other no face channel but Paul... I love what you made here. concise to the point and great editing and story telling! New Subscriber!
i'm a young australian and fondly remember this ad! i don't think i would have seen it aired on tv, but i assume it created enough of a buzz that someone showed me a copy hosted on the internet. super cool breakdown, and from you a top notch video overall, as usual :D
It's impressive that you got me to watch this whole video (except skipping the Nord VPN bit), because I usually avoid ads at all costs
And their major uncredited inspiration: _The Way Things Go_ from Peter Fischli and David Weiss.
I'm Swedish, and I remember this SO well. It's like a core memory you just opened up for me! I remember; Me, 13-ish old, on the sofa with my dad, both of us *completely* mesmerized and silent the whole time. Thank you for doing this video! It was an amazing one!
It was in the same bucket for me as the series of Sony Bravia ads, one with a clown / exploding paint and the other with some colourful balls bouncing down a street in San Fran. Beautifully done
I saw The Way Things Go many years before this, and it’s much better. The advert was clearly based on it and much shorter
Was scrolling through the comments to see if anyone mentioned the Fischli and Weiss 29 minutes (!!!) piece…it also why they didn’t win the Cannes prize being the tire rolling up the ramp the ad company admitted to cribbing from The Way Things Go
I remember watching this as a kid and getting my mind absolutely blown that I immediately tried to show it to everybody I know especially my parents haha
One of my favorite ad campaigns was the “White Gold is White Gold” series that culminated into the 22 minute online movie, “Battle for Milkquarius”.
So good and hilarious.
I remember having lunch in like 2012 and my brothers were watching TH-cam videos, we were particularly interested in Rube Goldberg Machines, then eventually we came across this ad,
it is strange that I wasn't even alive during the Airing of this ad, but I still have nostalgia for this ad. I haven't seen the ad in a while now, but thanks to you I will save this in my nostalgia playlist.
Thank You!
I wasn’t around when this aired on tv nor do I live in the right region to watch this, but somehow in the back of my mind I remember my dad showing this to me on facebook when i was around five or six and it was the best thing I had ever seen.
Thank you for making videos like this! THE ENDING WAS REAL SPECIAL
I think I saw the full uncut ad on TV, although I might just be piecing together different memories of separate 30 second cuts of each part of it. But I'd definitely remembered each part.
There's something about seeing something so surreal and just letting the moment take you, even if it is trying to sell me something.
The Honda adverts with the chilled voiceover actor are my favourites
Speakers vibrate to music that way at 1:59 in real life, I'm convinced. 😏
I was just talking with my other half last week about how these types of creative adds are a thing of the past since we aren’t focused on watching live tv so much anymore. We were talking about how good some of those late 1990’s early 2000’s adds were.
This my favourite advert ever, …… but I couldn’t remember which car company it was from! 😂
Imagine me watching this thinking "I remember that ad but who would order the DVD of it?" only for you to open the package of that yellow and pink case and it hit me that _I ordered that DVD_. You just unlocked a distant memory. I loved that ad for its simple complexity and loved finding out how it was done.
This is a masterpiece, not just an Ad
Incredible work as always, thanks for introducing me to this Paul!
Also, cool to know you are an F1 enthusiast
Welcome to no nonsense TH-cam channel. Thanks for all your hardwork Paul
Love this piece mate! I remember it taking over my imagination as a bright eyed 11 year old. I've always wanted to see what the vertical speakers shot looked like in the raw footage.
Clever central ad.
Very nostalgia approved.
I remember seeing "Cog" years ago. What a mind blowing leap forward it was in creativity.
There was a website I now forget, devoted to advertisers; lots of ads were available there--including some great ones like this one.
After a while the website converted to a subscription model, requiring a sign-in to view most of its content. This greatly annoyed my coworkers and me, because we weren't interested in the ins and outs of advertisement--we merely wanted to periodically waste an hour browsing funny commercials.
I knew it was the Honda ad. It’s still breathtaking.
My dad and I love Hondas. I still mourn my Aerodeck (passed down from dad) that had over 270,000 miles on the clock and mainly failed its MOT due its underside corroding (we had lived near the coast and it wasn’t garaged). I wish I’d spent tons of money fixing it because I’ve never had a better, more reliable, useful, powerful car before or since. RIP PYM 😢
Have you (or has anyone else) archived that DVD? Because that's something that ABSOLUTELY should be archived in its original form.
The editing and music in this video is stunning
What a nostalgic gut punch. That nord ad read was perfect.
Everything being on a line in the floor and the parts all being disconnected and bumping into each other reminds me of Peter Fischeli and David Weiss' 1987 "The Way Things Go"
Its almost half an hour long so if you enjoy this I highly recommend it
I remember that ad, I watched it for the first time in the cafeteria of my university where I was studying electrical engineering, it was all over the internet at the time... the pre-TH-cam and pre-Facebook era so it was a video file shared via email.
Love the research and work you put into your videos. I'm subscribed to 400 something channels at this point but there's only couple I actually get excited about when I see they've uploaded something.
Here in the UK i remember every time the ad came on everyone would stop to watch it then carry on with whatever they were doing, it was more entertainment than it was an advert.
The only thing that always confused the hell out of me was the tires rolling up the ramp. I remmember being like, "That's not how physics work!" Only to find that it can be done with a weight placed inside the tire that is heavy enough to overcome the incline. Genius! That being said this is hands down the finest commercial ever made.
Never seen this ad, but it is truly epic! Thanks for the insight
Before clicking on this video I was almost certain the ad would be a Rube Goldberg machine. I totally forgot about this ad but it's a masterpiece.
Always loved the ''even apeldoorn bellen'' ads in NL
I remember watching this here in the uk for the first time and EVERYBODY talking about it for weeks
TRULY BRILLIANT !!
Another creative ad I know I can sit and watch is ryan reynolds' mint mobile or american gin.
His creativity and humour blend so much.
Love Cogs. So creative.
Honda had good commercials. My favorite was when you saw a line of white and black cars just going up and down while "As Time Goes By" is played on the piano. The camera pans back, and you realize the cars are moving as the piano keys playing that song would.
I don't think it got the attention "Cog" did, but it was simple and beautiful.
Loved this ad i remember watching it on TV back in AU, it was amazing. Its really great that you have been able to preserve that DVD, you should consider reaching out to Honda to see if they would like to make a copy of it for their archives, as its entirely possible that they also dont have a copy. As someone who loves cars, and now works in advertising, it is a shame how so many of these great pieces of creatives were lost. I was lucky to get to be apart of some amazing campaigns for Range Rover that featured jaw dropping stunts, but the simplicity and clarity of the message in cog is amazing.
Also its no surprise it didnt win Cannes, nobody from the automotive industry every wins at Cannes!
You’ve done it again! Lovely video from start to finish
insanely under-rated channel, keep up the great work man!
You've just reminded me that I have one of those DVDs somewhere, and now that I've remembered that, I won't rest until I've found it! 😂
I still vividly remember seeing cog for the first time during that grand prix, i was on the phone to my brother at the time and slowly realised neither of us had said anything for 30 seconds or so:
"er, are you watching the grand prix?..."
"Yeah..."
"are you seeing this too?.."
"Yeah....."
"I don't know what they're selling but god damn it I'm in"
Our dad had the DVD too, i think in the UK they gave it away free with the Observer newspaper one weekend
I was one of those people who contacted Honda to ask for a copy of the advert. At the time I apologised to them and said that I didn't want one of the cars (couldn't afford it), but also said that I was a nerd who loved the add. They replied that the DVD was on its way to me. I still have it.
Have you bought a honda since?
@@Robert-cu9bm No, but I did convince a friend who COULD afford one that it was a good idea. He still says it was a good decision even today
For me, next to the Budweiser True Friends commercial, this was one of the first videos I remember watching on TH-cam in the late 2000’s
Man, I love your stuff. Especially because I never know what the next thing will be, but I'll watch it
I'm about 90% sure I had that DVD as a kid... Probably still kicking around somewhere.
The greatest achievements of the marketing team are that they make you forget that you are watching an advertisement for a product, and making you hopeful and excited to watch it again after the first viewing.
As a DJ, all too often a commercial can ruin a song, but Sugarhill Gang associated with this brilliant ad does not. That DVD cover design with the cut out is also brilliant. Never seen anything like that.
such a good video!
I love the scanline effects you use. Good job on fine tuning it enough to not get completely botched by youtube's compression.
As an American, this is the first I've heard of this ad. As far as long ads that we wanted more of, though, we had Terry Tate: Office Linebacker. They actually made sequels to the ad and posted them online.
I got one of those DVDs back in the day. Mine was in a cardboard gatefold box though, not the DVD case you have there. Still have it somewhere.
When this came out you could request a copy of it on DVD. I ordered one straight away. I remember it having a yellow case with pink cog, need to see if its collecting dust somewhere! Honda always had fantadtic adverts back then.
Aw, come on now, who doesn't love a good Wallet Wizard ad?
I remember seeing this ad. when it aired. As someone more at home with words than visuals (I'LL decide upon the pictures in my head, thank you very much!), I can remember admiring the sheer elegance of it. I was going through a stripped back phase - written and musically - and this ad. was just perfection.
With regard to live TV and commercials, thanks to the utter inanity, their only purpose now is as intermission to go to the toilet and get a drink (not from the same room!) and to ask questions/make comments.
A family member who only watches paid streaming channels tells me, "that's what the pause button is for."
That implies that the person wanting to talk a) has the remote and/or b) doesn't mind arbitrarily deciding for everyone else present that they all need to have their show interrupted to hear your very important comment.
A lot of divorces could be avoided if we all just let the commercials do their job. 😁
(By the way, I hope that when you said you found one of the DVDs, but not one of the 10,000 people who originally wrote away for it, that you meant you actually TRIED to find one of them!)
Yes, I know, too wordy, but it's 3am...
Another great video, Paul. Always excited when you upload.
:)
if youtube had decent ads like this, id happily remove adblock, and the fact that so many of us are here watching a video about the production of a car ad proves this is true for a lot of us. i remember this ad fondly, along with a handful of others im glad were preserved online, but between all of the outright fraudulent mobile game ads, phishing ads that directly insult your intelligence, and repetitive mind numbing trash, its hard to justify doing so. i strongly believe that platforms need to be made liable for the ads they serve. maybe then they will finally clean up the cesspool they have created.
I accidentally recorded this ad on vhs, I say accidentally because it was randomly in the ad break (if memory serves me right) of a Rove[Live] episode I wanted to record. I remember watching it over and over in disbelief. Between this ad and the Carlton Draught "This is a big ad" is what captivated me in the world of advertising and really enjoying the creativity of these agencies. I'm a creative maker and film lover and one day in the future I want to create practical effects for low budget films as a hobby more than a job, I really think this dream comes from this exact ad.