Police chase an armed criminal in a version of Los Angeles comprised entirely of corporate logos.Police chase an armed criminal in a version of Los Angeles comprised entirely of corporate logos.Police chase an armed criminal in a version of Los Angeles comprised entirely of corporate logos.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 9 wins & 5 nominations total
- Ronald
- (voice)
- …
- Big Boy
- (voice)
- …
- Haribo
- (voice)
- Chopper Pilot
- (voice)
- (as Gregory J. Pruss)
- …
- M&Ms
- (voice)
Featured reviews
"Logorama" may be viewed as innovative and entertaining as it incorporates so many brands and logos in the film. it may help to connect with the viewers as people and backgrounds are already familiar. However, I argue that "Logorama" could be a vehicle marketing, serving to advertise hundreds of brands in a space of 16 minutes. Most of the logos are on the screen for no apparent reason, and adds no storyline or depth to the plot. The logos are there just for the sake of being there. The inundation of unsubtle product placement and in your face advertising makes me wonder whether artistic merits are still prevalent in the short. I am hesitant to praise this short in a positive manner.
Though this 2D animation can be considered rough on the edges, it befits the aesthetic conceit of making it look like a collage awash with pop culture images with a soundtrack and musical score that succinctly captures the broad array of moods explored throughout. It is a severely violent animated catastro-vaganza that's never short on both visual and ironic humor.
All flash, not much substance; a sort of an inbred love-child of pop and postmodernist art. This 16-minute-plus film addresses the disdain felts towards the by-products of American brand of capitalism, everything that can be considered as unhealthy, garish, flamboyant, and ostentatious, and who better tackle that than the French, the people who pride themselves as having introduced the cinematic medium to the world. And by using Los Angeles as the setting for the film, home of the most prominent cinema and television industry in the whole world and dumping all those global capitalist brands and appropriated corporate mascots such as the ubiquitous McDonald's clown embodying the angst of somebody who feels more and more estranged by the fast pace of the ever-expanding universe he's in, it accomplishes in becoming a sheer escapist fantasy that's ridicules something, but it's certain that no one can ever feel slighted by such a gesture.
My rating: A-flat.
I cannot imagine how much work it must have been filling this virtual city with all of those brands. Each logo fits in in some logical way. Boxy logos, for example, are often used as buildings, while pedestrians are made from the yellow AOL Instant Messenger guy or the Bic pen guy. Cops are Michelin men. The zoo includes the MGM lion and the Linux penguin. Hundreds and hundreds of everyday logos are used and they are used so cleverly that it nearly boggles the mind. As new logos reveal themselves, the viewer is awestruck. "Aw, man! No way!"
It's that cool.
The plot is secondary, but includes chase scenes, gunfire, and natural disasters. It's action-packed. The dialogue is laced with profanity and the cartoon has a mature (PG-13?) edge.
LOGORAMA doesn't seem to have any deep symbolic meaning. It's just a fun way to kind of comment on how many different corporate logos people are familiar with nowadays. Our everyday lives are flooded with these images on TV, in newspaper ads, on the street, etc. This film takes these well-known images and has fun with them.
I think it's great fun to see all of the familiar logos and images, but the profanity seems a little unnecessary and off-putting and the low-budget voice cast could be better. (Just my opinion.) Still the visual experience is well worth it and the details in this short warrant repeat viewings and freeze-frame inspection.
How many logos can YOU name?
In the end, the film did a decent job of pointing a not-so subtle finger at the potential of social decline due to an inundation of consumer culture that feeds on the one thing it promotes.
Did you know
- GoofsWhen the Michelin Man cops are parked outside the KFC, the Ghostbusters "No Ghost" logo Stop sign is facing them with the ghost's head on the left (as it is customarily displayed in North America). When the cops pull away, the sign is shown from the other side, and the ghost is still facing the same way. When seen from the other side, the ghost's head should be on the right - as seen later on when the the Esso Girl and Big Boy are getting into the abandoned cop car.
- Quotes
Michelinman Mike: Oh, God. It was... you know what? You should come with us next time.
Michelinman Mitch: No, man. I don't like zoos.
Michelinman Mike: Aw, man. But the kids go apeshit for it.
Michelinman Mitch: Yeah, well, I don't see my kids that much. Besides, it's depressing.
Michelinman Mike: What? Getting up close to animals? I mean, where the hell else you going to get that close to a cheetah?
Michelinman Mitch: Yeah, that cheetah can run like a motherfucker, but in a zoo, they ain't got enough room to hit second gear. I mean, it ain't like they're in their natural habitat.
Michelinman Mike: Yeah, no shit, man. That's cause they'd be dead if they were in their natural habitat. These animals have been rescued. Usually injured or something in like the, you know the wild, or blind.
Michelinman Mitch: No shit?
Michelinman Mike: No shit.
Michelinman Mitch: See? I didn't know that.
Michelinman Mike: Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Michelinman Mitch: That's even more depressing. That's what I'm talking about. A blind ass cheetah bumping into trees and shit. That shit's fucked up.
Michelinman Mike: I didn't say the cheetah was blind.
Michelinman Mitch: Well then what's blind?
Michelinman Mike: N-nothing's blind. It's just an example.
Michelinman Mitch: Well then that's a fucked up example of some shit right there, man. That's what I'm talking about. Blind cheetahs and shit.
- Crazy creditsAfter the scrolling end credits have come to an end, a bald, toothless Ronald reappears to give a quick laugh.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Oscar Nominated Short Films 2010: Animation (2010)
- SoundtracksGood Mornin' Life
Performed by Dean Martin
Written by Robert Allen (as Robert I. Allen) and Joseph Meyer
Publishing administered by Larry Spier Music, L.L.C. o/b/o Memory Lane Music Group
from the Capitol Records recording