By Malay Desai
By: Mash Up and Blazar, GroupM India
Indian television’s comedian Kapil Sharma plays a car salesman in the first instalment of a reported web series for Honda Mobilio, a seven-seater car. Taking his flirtatious image further, he is shown staring at a girl mouthing car-related puns when his boss catches him. After a verbal duel, he watches a young woman walk in the showroom, her mother in tow on the phone. The mother is discussing a potential groom for her when Sharma initiates a dual sales pitch of both the car and himself as a candidate. The spot winds up with the lady choosing ‘the car’ and the boss left surprised, followed by a mention of Honda’s India site.
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There are two ways to look at this commercial - ‘Wow, look who Honda India managed to get for their ad!’ and ‘Wait, so Kapil managed to get Honda India for his ad debut?’ If you felt the former, you probably enjoyed this ad and probably laugh your lungs out every weekend during ‘Comedy Nights With Kapil.’ If the latter, well, our sympathies lie with you, more so if you are a Honda owner.
It’s true, the 68-year-old automobile legend from Japan, one whose models command a premium even at second or third owner re-sales, has chosen Kapil Sharma, Indian television’s biggest face from the past many months. We hear there are more such adventures of Kapil in store for the car’s launch early July, but have already tuned out thanks to this two-and-a-half-minute forced extravagance.
Sharma’s North Indian style dialogue-baazi is entertaining indeed, but if you are in the minority of Indians who like witty, dry humour, he could get annoying very quickly. Moreover, Comedy Nights stops being funny within the first 10 minutes of its two hour duration for the same reason. This spot too, which borrows Kapil’s ‘perennial flirt’, ‘hitting on anything that moves’ personality makes you cut a straight face throughout its duration.
It has a script though, and it’s filled with zero originalities, for instance the ‘aur batao’ question to which Kapil responds with a personal problem and the core idea of comparing a car’s features to that of a life partner’s, which has been done by dozens of radio spots so far. Perhaps the only funny bit is the ‘Kapoor ka launda ya apna Honda?’ question, which many snooty Honda owners might find too crass. After all, here’s the company which gave us the memorable ‘Cog’ commercial and many others for Civic and CR-V featuring impossible dreams and thrilling action.
It may not be the agency’s or the client’s fault, and Sharma has obviously chosen the finest brand to make his commercial debut with (among offers from sabun and razor brands we assume). But if you find this ad too ‘sasta’, remember a wealthy farmer near your city is already thinking of buying this Mobilio.
To watch this film, feed this easy link –‘bit.ly/June30ad’
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