.shareit

Home // AD View

TVC: Amul – Mooch (Part II)

BY IMPACT Staff

Share It

By Malay Desai

 

By: daCunha Communications

The second film of milk co-operative Amul’s ‘mooch’ campaign of July begins with a man entering a men’s saloon with his daughter in uniform. Using the Wild Western style of drama as well as music, the film shows the man having his moustache trimmed as per the ‘avval number mooch’ on the list, as other men look intimidatingly. When he’s done, the girl fishes out a bottle of Amul’s lassi and bears a moustache from drinking it, then proceeds to picking up the helmet and walking out as all the men, including her father, look on astoundingly. After the list’s item is changed to ‘Amul Mooch,’ the tagline reads ‘Amul mooch nahin toh kuch nahin.’

 

Do we like ?

 

The ad critic in me is currently in a state of severe withdrawal, as another desi commercial in a row has warranted a glowing column thanks to its inimitable style and entertaining execution. After Freecharge’s hilarious ‘Bambani’ debut, this time it’s the grand old man of Indian advertising, Amul. Having only recently watched director Rahul daCunha’s iconic play, Class of ’84, there is chance of more bias, but here goes:

 

In February this year, the national marketing arm for the dairy industry of America wound up its 20-year campaign ‘Got Milk?’ which featured the biggest stars with milky moustaches. In June, Amul unveiled its new campaign also on the same concept, only with a young girl in a uniform wearing the milky mooch. The ‘inspiration’ was striking but many argued it was good adaptation. This sequel, having lesser characters than the original but the same western style, makes the idea our own.

 

The ‘wild west’ style of intimidating characters and loud orchestra isn’t commonplace here, but our dramaloving people wouldn’t mind it one bit, without getting any references. I like it too, the scorn-filled faces of men in a dimly lit saloon in no way give away what’s to follow. The father is an underdog here, and the daughter, same girl from the first edition, turns out to be the hero again.

 

I’d have liked to see the shave and moustache-trimming happening, as it would’ve simplified the  narrative, before the other men are relieved that this guy has retained his mooch. The killer however arrives when the girl fishes out Amul lassi (sleek pack for the outdoors on display) and bears the ‘best’ moustache of them all, leaving the men, including her father shocked. Her slow-mo walk out is when most of us would be laughing or clapping – this is an ad you’d love to watch with friends in a theatre.

 

‘Mooch nahin toh kuch nahin’ isn’t original, but Amul is trying to make the line its own. The last great work on moustaches, O&M’s stellar film on Fevicol’s 50th anniversary, bagged a few awards and we won’t be surprised if this one does too. Thanks very mooch, Rahul.

 

(To watch this film and another recent launch, ‘Dosti butter’ from Amul, visit ‘YouTube.com/AmulTV’)

 

SOCIAL NEWS FEED

 

What’s NaMo doing about his old tweets?

The rougher edge of the sword of Twitter seems to be peeking out for NaMo now, who used the platform extensively in the months prior to the elections this summer. Now, his own tweets attacking the Congress on various issues sound like far-fetched promises and laced with irony. Our smart internet users have been digging out many of his own tweets and posing questions. His tweets blaming Sonia & Co. for the price rise are the most popular, as also the ones about his promises of bringing back black money. Recently, another one of his tweets, again holding the Congress responsible for Chinese incursions was dug up, as he was feeding the visiting Chinese Prez some dhokla. Knowing his past ways, we won’t be surprised if someone from his team deletes any such #facepalm tweets on the sly soon, or already has.

Sonia Gandhi like this

 

HMT lovers on social, and on Rediff

Thanks to the news of HMT, one of India’s biggest and oldest watch making companies shutting down, we stumbled upon another old relic of India, the portal Rediff.com! Yes, the go-to site for all our idle NRI relatives for news and gossip from India and our email providers of one era is still functional. Its homepage is tiled, a contemporary look after its sectioned links of the past, and its shopping and money channels are probably getting it the hits to survive. We also see a Zarabol, a hashtag based page having evidently me-too tendencies after Twitter and others have cracked the code. That said, Zarabol features a cool photo-based story on HMT, where dozens of rediff users have shared pictures and stories of their watches. Go check for a double dose of nostalgia, and also check your old email account!

Your dad likes this

 

Deepika’s second blow to clickbaiters

After last week’s rant taking on The Times of India, Deepika Padukone has now cooled off but written a strongly worded essay of sorts on her Facebook page. Evidently as a response to Pooja Bedi’s Bombay Times column which compared her to SRK’s body showoff pictures and asked her what the big deal was, Padukone’s post points out a subtle difference: ‘My issue is you propagating  the objectification of a REAL person and not a character,’ she says. The outrage may be out of proportion, but she’s done a brave job by taking on the media giant and more importantly talking about attention seeking tactics by click baiting sites. Surf through YouTube or read an article vaguely related to sex or glamour and you’d be circled by cheap sharks wanting your clicks, peddling someone’s cleavage or kisses.

Farah Khan likes this

 

Share It

Tags : AD View