Canadian Tire has power over the seasons

There's a decent payoff at the end of this initially perplexing Taxi spot for Canadian Tire, but I'm not sure viewers will hang in for it, if only because that "Summer Breeze" song sucks so damn much! This is actually a fairly cerebral and well-executed concept, the type of commercial Philip K. Dick would've created if he had been a copywriter. PKD was, however, not an ad scribe but a mind-bending novelist whose works inspired Blade Runner, Total Recall and Minority Report. Indeed, such mind games are probably best suited to films and books, as they require more attention to detail than the average consumer normally gives to a 30-second commercial. That cloying soundtrack alone will drive most viewers screaming from the room. And, perhaps needless to say, the lifeless "For days when seeing is believing" line lacks any sort of literary merit.

—Posted by David Gianatasio

November 26, 2008 in Automotive, Canada, Canadian Tire, Gianatasio, Taxi | Permalink

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Too long. The point becomes too obvious halfway through...and didnt Michelin do a similar ad in the US about 10 years ago where a car with Michelin rain tires is in it's own patch of sunshine pretty day while the rest of the world is in a monsoon?

Posted by: glenn | Nov 26, 2008 11:02:15 AM

I love it. And that "cloying soundtrack" worked pretty fucking well in Rushmore.

Posted by: maurer | Nov 30, 2008 4:51:53 PM


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