Somebody else has pulled a puma (referring to the feline, not the recently and unfairly beleaguered sports brand) and released a pseudvert a la viral proliferation without the approval/consent of Nokia. First mentioned here on the 12th, the spot features a kitty cat that takes a ceiling fan for a spin in such a way guaranteed to make the malcontents at PETA fuma.
wed. 19 marcg - source expressen
Michael Smirnoff, information at Nokia Scandinavia states(paraphrased by translation) : This is not an official movie. It goes against all ethical standards of Nokia advertising where films should be humoric and not tasteless.
Nokia are also looking for those who made the movie - "If we find them we will demand damages."
the funniest part about the expressen article is that they belive the cat is actually tortured. With that fantastically post-production ending don't you adgrunts think there is an edit from real-cat to cat-doll swinging from the fan as well?
Special effects people - calm down.
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PermalinkIt might not be Nokia's but it was funny as hell!!!
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Permalinkagreed - i wonder though - how much post production can a fake ad afford? I second dab's comment then.
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PermalinkAaah, I get it now... see Nokia's Press Release:
The offending footage had been proposed to Nokia by an external party but we had categorically rejected it as it neither complies with the ethical standards of the company nor reflects the policies and principles of our advertising. While the external creators who have created the material have assured us that trick photography was used and no animal was harmed...
so, an agency made it - got i rejected - and then accidently made an .mpeg out of it that they could email all their friends. ;-) Hence the good post production and cat-trick-speacial-effects.
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PermalinkI'd guess that the video was real- somebody was taping their cat swatting at the toy on the end of a fan blade, and captured something wholly expected when the cat was taken along for the ride. With that footage, the rest of it (the phone & hand in the foreground) would be easy to fake with bluescreen techniques.
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PermalinkClearly faked.
The cat is at least 5 pounds. The weight of the cat would unbalance the fan, making it wobble all over. In the video, there is zero wobble.
The fan would slow down given the additional load. The fan does not slow down.
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Permalinkaaaah, the voice of sanity - who has learned about newtons law when he/she paid attention in school. ta. :)
yes it's a stunt-kitty/post job.
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Permalinkthose who belive this is real are morons. sorry.
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PermalinkSo this is the agencies reply to Nokias denial of the ad?
They create an mpeg - it creates a buzz on the web - it viral spreads all over - and the agency can now snickering go "see, told you it was funny!".
Apart from the fact that it is totally off-strategy that is - I can't belive the agency went that far in creating something that so obvuiously goes against nokias current strategy. My guess is, this ad is old.
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PermalinkNo the fan wasn't wabbling, but don't you think even a stuffed animal would cause the fan to wabble(fake cat's have weight too). Either it was a firmly installed fan(fake cat or not), or the swinging cat was put in digitally. Even if the video was real it was simply a joke gone wrong(and was funny as hell).
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PermalinkListen,
this spot is on the latest Shots-reel. The agency credited is Bates, Singapore, which is Nokia's agency of record for that region. Why don't somebody give them a call and get their side of the story? Could be fun to hear...
Jesper
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PermalinkIf everyone takes a look at the spot again and freezes the end card you'll see these tell-tale words...
www.nokia-asia.com
guess Jesper must be right.
Bates SG handles most of Nokia's regional work here in asia...
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