A lazy guitar arpeggiates in the background of the blue-hued screen. Two motorcycles leap on to the scene with poetic grace – with nothing abrupt or jarring about them. The pace picks up – helmeted stunters pick the front wheel up on cue as the drums enter, and break into an array of never-seen-before tricks. The montage reaches a crescendo of action and soulful music, and by the time we’re through with the seventy second audio-visual treat, the hair on my arms is standing on ends.
This has been my reaction every single time I have seen the Pulsar Mania commercial. It been a while now, the commercial off-air even, but I caught a glimpse of Varad watching it on YouTube just the other day and the six-month-old nostalgia returned with a vengeance. Ok, so this is a little dated, but I’m glad the topic is still perfectly relevant because the ad, in so many ways, stands for the changing face of Indian motorcycling. Before we get to that, let’s take a look at the talent behind this stunning piece of television footage.
Abhijit Awasthi, National Creative Director for O&M India has been the man behind the Pulsar brand’s ads through the years – right from the ‘Definitely Male’ campaign, beside other funky ads for Asian Paints and Fevicol. His foreign comrade in arms and the director for this commercial shot was Lourens Van Rensburg, an award-winning director for Velocity Films and Ogilvy Johannesburg, and a die-hard biker himself. A special mention for the super-cool duo of Paul Norwood and Craig Hawkins of the Audio Militia, two immensely talented South African youngsters responsible for the music. And how can we forget the stunters on screen – a select group of six including European Stunt champ AC Farias and Irish stuntman Mattie Griffin, all superstars in their own right.
Did I say stars? I should rephrase that. No respect lost for the men on screen, but the ad treats them all as faceless, helmeted men. Once the awe of the magnificent stunts is over, the bikes emerge as the true stars of the ad. Not in a USP-selling, product glorifying manner. The treatment is so much more honest – it is all about a bunch of guys having some (very graceful and spectacular) fun on a bike.
And it is this honesty that appeals so much to a biker’s heart. Not a word spoken. No stereotypical heavy metal riffs, no sweet college girls to woo onto your bike, no mileage claims and no macho film stars splashing vengeful mud on the bad guys. For once, the ad is not about what the bike can do for you, but about what you can do on a bike. That is what the mania of being on a motorcycle is all about. For replicating that mania through this commercial, here’s a huge kudos to the team, and heartfelt gratitude for the pleasure.
[To revive the rush, here's the ad on YouTube.]


2 comments:
Thank God, im not alone. My family thought i was crazy when i told them about the "ad makes my hair stand" reaction!
Every time i see that ad, it makes me want to go out and buy a pulsar 220.
Cheers mate...
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