It was good at first, but this is the sort of commercial where you start thinking more about the mechanics than the concept. Shots, like the people's reactions to the clay, were just filler. A lot of the bunnies' movements were just repetitions of previous movements. You start to think that the first shots could have been done on-scene, but the rest could just as easily have been CGI, especially with the big street scenes.
And even if it was all done on-scene, stop-motion and all, you've lost interest.
Is it any more creepy than those homoerotic Burger King ads? I recall where the guy sees the king, who is standing at the window, holding a long sandwich at groin level. After first making sure his wife isn't watching, he then takes the sandwich and begins to indulge.
This is just ordinary compared to today's commercials.
If this child dies, she will die. If she suffers health problems, so be it. If she grows up and becomes the next Hitler, that's probably more to do with how she will be raised.
Maybe in China she would have been aborted because her parents wanted a boy.
Whatver. The right to choose includes the right to make bad choices. Time will tell if this was good or bad.
Jesus and heavy Metal aside, the symmetry of the image helps to create the image of the face. You just need two eyes and one mouth for a picture to appear in your mind.
As for Jesus and the samurais, we are used to seeing the face of Jesus downcast, with the crown of thorns. Nobody thinks "baby Jesus" or "Jesus healing the sick", looking at this picture. This kinda reminds me of Jesus as a Transformer.
Cruising past this again, I noticed the last line. I really hope the wedding didn't "go off without a hitch", or the whole thing would have been kinda pointless.
Shots, like the people's reactions to the clay, were just filler.
A lot of the bunnies' movements were just repetitions of previous movements. You start to think that the first shots could have been done on-scene, but the rest could just as easily have been CGI, especially with the big street scenes.
And even if it was all done on-scene, stop-motion and all, you've lost interest.
Otherwise, I might never have caught on.
I recall where the guy sees the king, who is standing at the window, holding a long sandwich at groin level. After first making sure his wife isn't watching, he then takes the sandwich and begins to indulge.
This is just ordinary compared to today's commercials.
You would have to be on pot to be amused by this one.
"Whoa, dude. Pot noodles..."
The hat one was almost unbelievable - would have been better if we saw it getting put together first.
Do crows have buttcheeks?
Eugenics rears its ugly head.
If this child dies, she will die. If she suffers health problems, so be it. If she grows up and becomes the next Hitler, that's probably more to do with how she will be raised.
Maybe in China she would have been aborted because her parents wanted a boy.
Whatver. The right to choose includes the right to make bad choices. Time will tell if this was good or bad.
As for Jesus and the samurais, we are used to seeing the face of Jesus downcast, with the crown of thorns. Nobody thinks "baby Jesus" or "Jesus healing the sick", looking at this picture. This kinda reminds me of Jesus as a Transformer.