That’s a hard nut for an ad to crack.
Unless you are Norwegian. And then it seems fitting and almost natural for
a viral “Visit
Oslo” spot to feature a hangdog 31-year-old narrator and guide named “Halfdan” who’s so down on his native city that he opens with, “I wouldn’t come here, to be
honest.”
Then he adds, “Is it even a city, you know what I mean?”
For those who know it all, Oslo is the capital, and largest city in Norway, but technically
it’s a municipality.
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This brilliant reverse psychology strikes at the heart of every classic tourist commercial featuring saccharine couples vibrantly dancing into the sunset.
That perfection seems so corny and ordinary by comparison.
By contrast, this spot is anti-advertising, anti-crowds, anti-noise -- and so Norse.
As he walks us around the city,
our Oslovian guide continues to list dilemmas like “Everything is just so available…there’s no exclusiveness.”
Which is true. “Oslo feels like a village, maybe.
You can walk from one side of town to the other in like 30 minutes,” he says, as he pads along.
He also notes that he can just step into a sophisticated restaurant without a reservation
and get a table, “and I’m not even famous… what does that tell you?”
As for culture? “If you don’t have to stand in line for at least a couple of
hours, is it even worth seeing?”
The spot is shot in a natural, (hand-held?) videographic style that also manages to be deadpan. You get to enjoy the quiet and see the ease and beauty of
the backdrop -- as those attractions get undercut by the narrator’s blasé-to-sullen comments.
It’s an unexpected, expertly crafted monologue. And in his slightly depressed
monotone, our tour guide delivers it perfectly.
Plus, there’s visual satire to match.
For example, the director seems to have snuck in a surprisingly not-terrible balls joke.
When sad sack Halfdan visits a museum and gazes up at a sculpture, he’s shot from way back, through the open legs and hanging package of a David-like statue.
Then we witness Halfie
standing next to Norwegian Edvard Munch’s powerful, uber-famous painting, “The Scream.” A breakthrough for the time, it was the first to express the angst of the almost
20th century-modern person. (Oslo boasts a newish Munch Museum, btw.)
“It’s not exactly the Mona Lisa,” Halfdan says, Norwegian burn-style.
There are also
subtle comic touches that are priceless. For example, we see Halfdan sitting on a dock in the harbor, getting splashed as he says, “I don’t understand why people go swimming in the middle
of a city. It’s disgusting.”
The entire time, he wears a canvas shoulder bag with a giant logo promoting 2 percent milk. It’s a hilarious wet blanket, a graphic way to
water down the fun.
Then there’s the post-swim shot of him in a robe and white socks, navigating thongs.
He ends by saying “I think a city should feel a little hard to get.
It’s like a good relationship, it’s not supposed to be easy.”
I guess it’s a Nordic thing. Last year, Sweden released a brilliant and biting “We’re
not Switzerland” campaign (sand banks, not financial banks.) And post-COVID, Iceland’s “Let It Out” ads encouraged people to go there and start screaming at fjords.
Halfdan’s tone in the opener also reminds me of the logic of the raincoated Swede in the old, award-winning Ikea lamp commercial. While we watch this poignant, goose-necked, Pixar-logo-like
lamp get pitched to the curb, thrown out of its warm home into the rain and dark of night, the narrator stands outside on the street, getting drenched and observing.
“Many of you feel
bad for this lamp,” he says in his slightly accented English as he moves to get near a streetlight. “That is crazy. The lamp has no feelings, and the new one is much better.”
At a time when European tourism otherwise means fighting the heat, mobs, and lines, our narrator tells us about all the grief we’ll have to suffer by visiting Norway’s airy,
interesting, uncrowded capital.
That’s where life is so easy-going and egalitarian that you can walk around the corner and bump into the King, and he’s just a regular guy.
That’s crazy. This city sounds so much better. I can’t wait to go.