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Logorama©

Original title: Logorama
  • 2009
  • R
  • 16m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
6.4K
YOUR RATING
Logorama© (2009)
Car ActionComputer AnimationHigh-Concept ComedyParodyPolice ProceduralSatireActionAnimationComedyCrime

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.

  • Directors
    • François Alaux
    • Hervé de Crécy
    • Ludovic Houplain
  • Writers
    • François Alaux
    • Hervé de Crécy
    • Ludovic Houplain
  • Stars
    • Bob Stephenson
    • Sherman Augustus
    • Aja Evans
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    6.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • François Alaux
      • Hervé de Crécy
      • Ludovic Houplain
    • Writers
      • François Alaux
      • Hervé de Crécy
      • Ludovic Houplain
    • Stars
      • Bob Stephenson
      • Sherman Augustus
      • Aja Evans
    • 25User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 9 wins & 5 nominations total

    Photos16

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    Top cast11

    Edit
    Bob Stephenson
    Bob Stephenson
    • Ronald
    • (voice)
    • …
    Sherman Augustus
    Sherman Augustus
    • Bibendum Mitch
    • (voice)
    Aja Evans
    Aja Evans
    • Esso Girl
    • (voice)
    Joel Michaely
    Joel Michaely
    • Big Boy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Matt Winston
    Matt Winston
    • Haribo
    • (voice)
    Andrew Kevin Walker
    Andrew Kevin Walker
    • Pringles Hot & Spicy
    • (voice)
    David Fincher
    David Fincher
    • Pringles Original
    • (voice)
    Greg Pruss
    • Chopper Pilot
    • (voice)
    • (as Gregory J. Pruss)
    • …
    Josh Eichenbaum
    • M&Ms
    • (voice)
    Jaime Ray Newman
    Jaime Ray Newman
    • Dispatch Girl - Radio
    • (voice)
    Pauline Moingeon Vallès
    • Directors
      • François Alaux
      • Hervé de Crécy
      • Ludovic Houplain
    • Writers
      • François Alaux
      • Hervé de Crécy
      • Ludovic Houplain
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    7.56.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8framptonhollis

    quick, hilarious, unique action-packed satire

    'Logorama' is an Oscar-winning short comedy that cleverly satirizes extreme corporate-and-consumerism by creating a universe built upon various logos and products and inserting within this universe a largely parodic action-movie-plot. It all leads to disaster and catastrophe and has a largely cynical smile on its lips throughout, sarcastically shoving in the viewer's face dozens upon dozens of consumerist products and logos that are inserted into the film in all sorts of clever little ways. Technically, it isn't perfect (the voice acting is mostly at least okay, but for some reason its recording doesn't exactly always fit the environment of the film, it definitely sounds like it was recorded separately, which a lot of animated films are able to disguise, if any of what I just said makes any sense), but the animation very well fits the story, style, and concept, and the writing is witty and hilarious. It's so entertaining the flaws are almost completely overshadowed and what lies before us is a superb satirical comedy that only runs at around 17 minutes.
    10fpd-675-864580

    Logorama -My first Oscar prediction!

    I honestly felt the Wallace and Gromit short would win, although I felt Logorama hit a lot of social buttons for me. A touch of Tarantino and the visual dreck of our Corporate world turned on its ear. It was base, and crude, and oh so American. This is a wonderful poke at the 'freedom fries' period of consumption in this glorious nation of visual icons constantly being force fed to anyone living in consumer society. Brilliant color,fast pacing,clever to the nth degree. Leave it to French artists to hold the mirror up for all of us to see. Some will not want to watch, and if they do may not get it. Not being trained in the cyber style of animation, I was very impressed with the short. Kinematograph was deserving of more than just a mention, but with 32 entries I can't imagine having to select from the field. Runaway was a lovely poke at society as well. If the animated shorts are available to you, run-don't walk - and experience all of them. 'I'm lovin' it' means much more for me now.
    jimjo1216

    Unbelievably clever visual experience

    LOGORAMA brings to life a world built out of familiar logos. Hundreds of logos and mascots are used, and they include examples from software companies, shopping centers, restaurants, sports teams, movies, and any number of other products, agencies, and corporations. It's a lot of fun watching all of these familiar logos used so creatively. They fill the screen and zip by without calling attention to themselves. Watching LOGORAMA is like a game of "How Many Logos Can You Name?" To fully appreciate this animated short, one needs to freeze-frame each part and check out all the details.

    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?
    7john_mclane_yippee-ki-ya

    Smart funny Tarantino-esquire take on the ubiquity of logos.

    François Alaux, Hervé de Crécy and Ludovic Houplain apply an extensive use of symbolism in their short film Logorama (2009) to explore the realist idea of mass consumerism in a negative light. The characters, their surroundings, and every last object in the film are all anthropomorphised and become an embodiment of the persistent and unrelenting commercials we see in our everyday life. Far from being simply a chaotic incorporation of advertisements, Logorama is a witty and hyperbolic social commentary on the ubiquity of advertising and its energetic show of entrepreneurial images and metaphors make it a superb work of realism. By launching a barrage of countless brand logos at the viewer, Logorama makes us take notice of our solely consumerist generation. The choice of logos was decided by several different aspects. The heroes of the short, several Bibendi (or the Michelin Men), were chosen because of their perception as tough and being able to withstand hazards, it was also owing to their rotund appearance acting as a caricature of American policemen due to the long held notion of them being overweight. Ronald McDonald was chosen to be the villain because of the perception of clowns being fear-provoking; this is also an instance of major influencing the minor, as the Joker from Batman was part of the inspiration for this choice. One can easily see the contrasting characteristics of each company being incorporated into their characters; the Michelin Men who help with road hazards and ensure you make it on your way are shown in a better light than Ronald McDonald, the mascot for a company whose unhealthy and fatty food cause heart disease. Furthermore, by subverting the usual wholesome image of Ronald McDonald, the creators are emphasising the evils of commercialising and brand overuse. The menacingly ominous appearance of him at the end of the credits, after the viewer has seen him supposedly die, accentuates the idea of no escape from major companies and their icons; the indestructible symbols of the manufacturing supremacy; a very realist idea. Other, more trivial, characters were chosen for their graphic outward appearance such as Julius Pringles, the mascot for the Pringles potato snacks, being all the van drivers in the film as people associate them with moustaches. Mr Clean is portrayed as a flamboyantly camp stereotype, attributable to his appearance; the earring, the tight trousers, the muscular arms shown bulging through his tight white top and his shaved head. Other icons chosen include the Big Boy and Haribo mascots which do not fit the identity that their company and the general public have given them and have a completely different nature than the one they are associated with shown through their filthy language and misbehaviour. This is echoed in several of the other icons and works because of the viewers' knowledge of the companies they are known for, for instance the Esso girl smoking. By pitting corporations against one another, Logorama demonstrates how they are fighting off the competition; this is shown when Ronald McDonald destroys the Pizza Hut restaurant and when he is shown killing other logos such as Mr. Peanut or the Michelin man in a Maurice Binder barrel homage shot. This symbolism portrays a very real situation; this depiction of what these companies iconic logos will do to survive shows the desperate or harsh lengths the companies will go to in order to stay on top and bankrupt one another. By bouncing the companies off each other Logorama also shows the predicament of the onslaught of consumer culture feeding off one another and itself; an instance being when Ronald McDonald is flung from his Grease 2 bicycle when driving into a Weightwatchers sign. A company like Weightwatchers would have less demand without fast food restaurants like the one Ronald stands for. Next, the pace of the film is very rushed, with each key event taking seconds to happen, this can be seen to symbolise the speed of our everyday lives, the speed of commercial breaks on television, and the speed with which companies bring out new products and advertisements.
    6CinemaSerf

    Logorama

    After about two minutes of this, I was starting to look out for which logos weren't there. To be fair, it takes aan even swipe at the global branding industry and not just the American one, but that doesn't really do much to alleviate the repetitiveness of the project - even if a police chase is introduced to liven things up; there's some flirting that "only tickles for a little while", and we even have an earthquake. The writers needed to remember that just because you swear a lot, it doesn't make it funny and I was a bored with this quite early. It is cleverly structured and quickly paced, effectively reminding us of just how pervasive advertising and marketing are in our culture, and the sight of Ronald McDonald with an Uzi 9mm does raise a smile but otherwise it's a noisy nothing special, I'm afraid, that's far too long and labours it's point. I know - Starfleet Command isn't there....

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      When 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 credits
      After the scrolling end credits have come to an end, a bald, toothless Ronald reappears to give a quick laugh.
    • Connections
      Edited into The Oscar Nominated Short Films 2010: Animation (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Good 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

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    FAQ5

    • How many logos did they use in all?
    • What was the reaction from the brands?
    • Why did they decide to cast Ronald McDonald as the bad guy?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 5, 2011 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Логорама
    • Production companies
      • Autour de Minuit Productions
      • Canal+
      • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      16 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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    Logorama© (2009)
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