Acura TLX Commercial Shamelessly Rips Off Groundhog Day
In an article published earlier this month about Acura’s poor November sales, I opined that the luxury brand should follow the lead of its parent company and boost December profits with a holiday-themed sales event, similar to the Happy Honda Days. My casual suggestion was for a Jewish-ish eight-day clearance special called Hanacurah, the Festival of Headlights.
I forgot, of course, that Acura already has its own seasonal sales special—the “Oh What Fun It Is To Drive” event. But I’ve now been reminded of that fact several times the last couple of weeks by a television ad the automaker has been airing for the Acura TLX and MDX, which shamelessly rips off the plot of the classic Bill Murray movie Groundhog Day.
Related info: “Oh What Fun It Is To Drive” Acura sales incentives
Take a look:
The ad begins with a man kissing his wife good morning, and then opening the $35,000 Christmas present she casually hands to him over breakfast: a brand new Acura TLX!
Ecstatic, the man kisses his generous wife and then neglects to ask if she’d like to join him for the first drive. He really takes advantage of the TLX’s performance capabilities on the foggy, snowy streets of his residential area, accelerating along and musing to himself, “I wish this day would never end.”
Related: 2016 Acura TLX model overview
And because this man has had such a hard life, the fates grant his wish, and he repeats the same day over and over again—much like Bill Murray does in the classic 1993 fantasy-comedy Groundhog Day, in which he plays an arrogant weatherman who repeats the date February 2nd over and over.
By reliving the same day, the guy in the commercial even learns to avoid stepping on the toys his children left in the hall, in much the same way that Murray eventually learns to avoid stepping in the puddle he keeps tripping in on his way to Gobbler’s Knob.
So how does this guy break the endless cycle? The same way Bill Murray’s character in Groundhog Day does [SPOILER ALERT]: by learning to care about someone other than himself.
Just as Murray’s unselfish love for Andie MacDowell enables him to finally experience February 3rd, the Acura TLX guy breaks the cycle by waking up before his wife does and then surprising her with the keys to her very own Acura MDX.
Having a plot that’s stolen from a classic American film makes this one of the season’s more annoying holiday car commercials. But hey, at least they didn’t put any damn bows on the cars.
Patrick Grieve was born in Southwestern Ohio and has lived there all of his life, with the exception of a few years spent getting a Creative Writing degree in Southeastern Ohio. He loves to take road trips, sometimes to places as distant as Northeastern or even Northwestern Ohio. Patrick also enjoys old movies, shopping at thrift stores, going to ballgames, writing about those things, and watching Law & Order reruns. He just watches the original series, though, none of the spin-offs. And also only the ones they made before Jerry Orbach died. Season five was really the peak, in his opinion. See more articles by Patrick.