Top 10 Most AMAZING CAR ADS
We bring you the best 10 car (and motorcycle) ads of all time based
on
creativity, humor and a very scientific awesomeness scale.
Mercedes-Benz: “Not in This Weather.” Debut of Mercedes’ 4-matic all-wheel-drive system, demonstrating unrelenting and unexpected reliability.
Suzuki: “Walkin’ the Dog.” You want to go for a ride, but the missus wants you to take Fluffy for a walk.We’re sure you can compromise. Suzuki proposes a solution with the GSXR-1000.
Honda: “When Things Just Work.” After 605 failed attempts, the film crew finally got this awesome Rube Goldberg-esque contraption to work, creating one of the coolest non-CGI ads to ever grace our TV screens. The only big mistake was the crew, much to the dismay of Honda engineers, disassembled two of only six handmade Accords in existence to make the ad.
Volkswagen: “Terrorist Proof.” Banned worldwide for obvious reasons, this VW commercial demonstrates how “small but tough” the Polo is.
General Motors: “All By Myself.” This ad drew howls of criticism from suicide-prevention advocates after its debut during the 2007 Super Bowl. GM execs defending it as a portrayal of GM’s commitment to quality was almost as laughable.
We’re not picking sides. We just like the ad.
Ford: “F-150 Stopping a Landing C-123 Cargo Plane.” Following a common thread of pickups performing super-human (super-vehicular?) feats of strength, we found an F-150 stopping a 35,000-pound plane pretty damned impressive.
Fiat: “Don’t Touch My Car.” Share the road? Get real. Never underestimate the spiteful pride residing within a Fiat owner’s heart.
Audi: “Old Luxury Just Got Put on Notice.” An homage to The Godfather in which Alex Rocco, playing the role of Moe Green, wakes up to find a quite unpleasant surprise between the sheets.
BMW: “Star.” Guy Ritchie’s direction with Madonna and Clive Owen’s acting may not sound like a “best ever” commercial, but add a 500-plus horsepower BMW M5, shake well and serve however you like it. Sadly the ad never aired, reportedly because Madonna didn’t wear a seatbelt. We think it might be because the “ad” is seven minutes long.
Ferrari and Shell: “Ferrari Fuel for the Road.” A classic 60-year synoptic round- the-world tour of Shell and Ferrari’s racing relationship. Pure moto-porn.

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