I was working on a building where there was a Toyota ad team occupying the top floor , I showed this ad to a group in the elevator as we all were going to lunch, appetites were lost to say the least.
@HaveNoFearTomIsHere Actually I thought about that scene for a long time wondering how they made wheels roll up a plane against gravity. The only way it could be accomplished is through a counter weight installed on the back of the rim which would make the tire rotate to its new center of gravity. I don't like how it is done as I agree with you Tom, it makes it look fake. If you still don't belive me, then just enjoy it for what it is - a cool video.
@@booxwee3804 Of course they can, especially if give them a little help with a thin object, like a wire, on the rear side. I do not expect that to be needed though, tires are not exactly sharp-ended where they touch the surface.
The muffler part was spliced, the whole thing works as a Rube Goldberg machine though. Even then, yall act like Goldberg machines are some sort of impossible to achieve sci-fi tech. 😂
@@calsas its simply not cgi dude, and they wouldn't make a fake support video for it with all this setup at a time when youtube didnt even exist. This commercial came out in 2003 and literally won all the advertisement awards that year. Getting realistic looking metal and glass was extremely hard to create with computer graphics back then and this is not some big budget sci-fi movie where it makes sense to use CGI, its a rube Goldberg machine with car parts, it costs way less to make a actual one than to use CGI, back then the only time even films used cgi was when they absolutely had to
@@shivamarya5225 I get your point, I really do. I have already had experience working with CGI shortly after that period. You are entitled to your opinion, but I can assure you that this is CGI, at least some aspects of it.
Actually that part makes sense. With counter weights ot is possible that the tires hit before the first one reached it's centre of gravity, causing it to keep rolling a short distance. That would be the science behind it but I still think this video is a ruse to make people think it's real.
@shivamarya5225 bro this comment is 5 years old. But yeah it does appear to be real, however it still looks uncanny and fake the way things move. Plus it was 2 takes stitched together with a lil CGI, so not exactly real technically speaking, even if the two stitched parts are real.
That is the best, most original car ad ever broadcasted
Not original: ruclips.net/video/gfq3-Ydt_og/видео.html
Link doesn't work. What was the title of that.
no, there is a weight hidden inside the wheel that draws one side closer to the ramp making them roll against gravity
What about the car window? Hologram wood? Smoke and mirrors? Get outta here
Car window had a sensor dumbass...@@SnailEggsWithNailsInThem
I was working on a building where there was a Toyota ad team occupying the top floor , I showed this ad to a group in the elevator as we all were going to lunch, appetites were lost to say the least.
@HaveNoFearTomIsHere Actually I thought about that scene for a long time wondering how they made wheels roll up a plane against gravity. The only way it could be accomplished is through a counter weight installed on the back of the rim which would make the tire rotate to its new center of gravity. I don't like how it is done as I agree with you Tom, it makes it look fake. If you still don't belive me, then just enjoy it for what it is - a cool video.
No what made it look fake was the wood plank going through a moving car window
And the car is very good !
what is the music at 3:00
In the middle of the night by Joe
@@indiohuarachudo8433 Joe “in the middle of the night” Rogan
How do the tires roll up the ramp? I'm not saying I think it's fake I'm just curious if anyone knows how it works.
weights make it go upwards
Weights attached on the far side of the wheels, at the top of them.
@@michaelkarnerfors9545They would not be able to stay still before they are hit. And the speaker section is just stupid
@@booxwee3804 Of course they can, especially if give them a little help with a thin object, like a wire, on the rear side. I do not expect that to be needed though, tires are not exactly sharp-ended where they touch the surface.
Counterweight inside the tire "fall" accelerating the tire just enough to hit the other ones
Cracking advert but true credit has to lay with Fishli & Weiss who made 'The Way Things Go' in 1987.
They should’ve done one for the Super Bowl with the Accord 2.0T back in 2018
how could it happen in the uphill road tires? 😰
it couldn't, it's CGI
Tell me watch any movie from 1992 to 2003 and comeback here when you dumbass has wisened up.
They shifted the center of mass
Respect !
@Smartaclee so agree
Simple weights, really. On top of other side of tires.
That's why they aren't rolling back down as well.
nice one honda
💗💗😍😍💕💕
0:05 2:41 2:46 2:59 3:26
Persistence..
The very definition of...tenacity...
Cleary edited and spliced.
Only once in the middle and it's not clear, there's a video that point out the exact moment and I still can just barely see it.
The muffler part was spliced, the whole thing works as a Rube Goldberg machine though. Even then, yall act like Goldberg machines are some sort of impossible to achieve sci-fi tech. 😂
honda made a bad ass car, bad ass commercial. but everything changed. lol. what happen honda what happennnn
@hitachi088 But that would be cheating.
i thought it would be all animated oO
The final product is undoubtedly 100% CGI, I don't know why they bothered trying to convince us otherwise with this...
Except its not
@@shivamarya5225 watch it again
@@calsas its simply not cgi dude, and they wouldn't make a fake support video for it with all this setup at a time when youtube didnt even exist. This commercial came out in 2003 and literally won all the advertisement awards that year. Getting realistic looking metal and glass was extremely hard to create with computer graphics back then and this is not some big budget sci-fi movie where it makes sense to use CGI, its a rube Goldberg machine with car parts, it costs way less to make a actual one than to use CGI, back then the only time even films used cgi was when they absolutely had to
@@shivamarya5225 I get your point, I really do. I have already had experience working with CGI shortly after that period. You are entitled to your opinion, but I can assure you that this is CGI, at least some aspects of it.
@@calsas r/confidently incorrect
I see what you mean, this comment of mine is so douchey
A year ago me was so irritating
My god the internet used to be so much nicer and more understanding
3:23 the wheel moves forward after hitting the other wheel, its fake
Actually that part makes sense. With counter weights ot is possible that the tires hit before the first one reached it's centre of gravity, causing it to keep rolling a short distance.
That would be the science behind it but I still think this video is a ruse to make people think it's real.
(8 years ago, wow)
@@jamessmithers5206 wow
Still fake
It's real
@shivamarya5225 bro this comment is 5 years old. But yeah it does appear to be real, however it still looks uncanny and fake the way things move.
Plus it was 2 takes stitched together with a lil CGI, so not exactly real technically speaking, even if the two stitched parts are real.