A few hours ago I was watching I, Robot with a friend of mine and as soon as the infamous "classic converse shoes" scene came on she went on on a tirade about the evils of product placement.
Now, I won't sit here and defend I, Robot. We were only even watching it cause she has a huge crush on Will Smith (tip for the guys: if you take a chick to a movie featuring an actor she has the hots for, it's basically pre-foreplay. Specially if said actor spends a long time showing off his body like Smith here.) but I've always thought product placement was not only "not a big deal", but it's actually BETTER than the alternative "brand x" thing.
Follow me here... this girl kept saying how Will Smith suddenly pimping some Converse detracts from the artistic merit of the movie. Again, I won't say that I, Robot specifically has any artistic value, but I don't really agree with her on that for one sole reason... realism. We, the people in real life outside the screen, are INUNDATED by brands from all angles. That's how the world IS.
She said that it's actually jarring and stops the immersion... I've found quite the opposite to be true. When they showcase cola cans that say "COLA" or, I dunno, they play a "Funtendo Zii", THAT'S what I find jarring and non-immersive. It can be handled well, specially for comedic effects, but it's usually a cheap way to try to avoid "product placement" and it just falls flat.
So when a movie has actual brands on it it actually feels more "real". Hey, that Nokia phone she's using is just like the one my neighbor has! Oh, I saw that car the bad guy is driving on Top Gear!
Am I explaining my point here? A great example: A bit, not much, but a bit of the empathy you feel for Chuck Noland comes from the fact that he works for a company we've all heard about, we've all interacted with, FedEx. It's something we all can relate to and can feel more connected to a guy working for something we know well as opposed to having him work for "StateEx" or whatever. It feels more like it's happening "in this world" and not some parallel universe where everyone drinks "COLA" and shops at "Buy More", y'know? It's the same world we know where people drink Pepsi and wear Nikes.
I know that it also means the brand being placed also gets a nice advertisement spot where everyone can see that, HEY, Will Smith uses Converse!! And I know there are some studio heads and even directors that do sell out and just plaster PEPSI all over the movie for no good reason except money. But that's not really the norm, and it's not even THAT jarring when it does happen. Again, we've all suddenly found ourselves completely surrounded by ads, it happens, it's realistic. But detracting from the artistic merit? I don't think so, really.
What do you guys think, though?
Now, I won't sit here and defend I, Robot. We were only even watching it cause she has a huge crush on Will Smith (tip for the guys: if you take a chick to a movie featuring an actor she has the hots for, it's basically pre-foreplay. Specially if said actor spends a long time showing off his body like Smith here.) but I've always thought product placement was not only "not a big deal", but it's actually BETTER than the alternative "brand x" thing.
Follow me here... this girl kept saying how Will Smith suddenly pimping some Converse detracts from the artistic merit of the movie. Again, I won't say that I, Robot specifically has any artistic value, but I don't really agree with her on that for one sole reason... realism. We, the people in real life outside the screen, are INUNDATED by brands from all angles. That's how the world IS.
She said that it's actually jarring and stops the immersion... I've found quite the opposite to be true. When they showcase cola cans that say "COLA" or, I dunno, they play a "Funtendo Zii", THAT'S what I find jarring and non-immersive. It can be handled well, specially for comedic effects, but it's usually a cheap way to try to avoid "product placement" and it just falls flat.
So when a movie has actual brands on it it actually feels more "real". Hey, that Nokia phone she's using is just like the one my neighbor has! Oh, I saw that car the bad guy is driving on Top Gear!
Am I explaining my point here? A great example: A bit, not much, but a bit of the empathy you feel for Chuck Noland comes from the fact that he works for a company we've all heard about, we've all interacted with, FedEx. It's something we all can relate to and can feel more connected to a guy working for something we know well as opposed to having him work for "StateEx" or whatever. It feels more like it's happening "in this world" and not some parallel universe where everyone drinks "COLA" and shops at "Buy More", y'know? It's the same world we know where people drink Pepsi and wear Nikes.
I know that it also means the brand being placed also gets a nice advertisement spot where everyone can see that, HEY, Will Smith uses Converse!! And I know there are some studio heads and even directors that do sell out and just plaster PEPSI all over the movie for no good reason except money. But that's not really the norm, and it's not even THAT jarring when it does happen. Again, we've all suddenly found ourselves completely surrounded by ads, it happens, it's realistic. But detracting from the artistic merit? I don't think so, really.
What do you guys think, though?