Mercury In A Lot Of Retrograde: Cold Start

Cs Mercury Hellscape
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I’m not sure exactly what was going through the various heads and brains of Mercury’s marketing department back in 1989, but whatever it was, it seems pretty dire. Or sinister. Or, lets’s be honest here, a bit, um, hellish. I mean, look at that Grand Marquis up there! That was the first big two-page spread of the car, the Panther-platformed swankier sibling to the Crown Vic, resplendent in vinyl tops and opera lights and absolutely velour-saturated inside. So why show it in what looks to be a brimstone-smelling hellscape? Actually, this crimson wasteland reminds me of something really specific from a decade before this brochure was printed, something strange and puzzling from, of all places, Disney.

Back in the late 1970s, every movie-producing entity saw Star Wars and realized they needed something to compete, pronto. Even juggernauts like Disney. So, Disney released their big sci-fi Star Wars-fighter in 1979, the deeply peculiar The Black Hole, Disney’s first PG film and also one of their, um, scariest? Or at least creepiest? It was loosely based on Shakespeare’s The Tempest but took place in deep space and had Ernest Borgnine and some floating robots:

It’s weird. But, more specifically, if you’ll forgive the spoilers for a movie that has been out since before the Reagan Era, the ending is what reminds me of that Mercury ad. Look:

It’s not ever made explicitly clear where this scene takes place, just the implication that it’s through the black hole, the main villain and his robot have somehow merged, and it sure as hell seems like, well, hell.

I do have to say I loved the goofy-cute robot designs in here. They floated, had big funny eyes, and one, the old beat-up model, was voiced by Slim Pickins, here giving you a moving robot death scene:

Dying robots, Mercuries, vague visions of hell: I sure know how to get your day started, huh?

 

29 thoughts on “Mercury In A Lot Of Retrograde: Cold Start

  1. To understand the ad, you had to view it in context of the entire 1989 Mercury ad campaign.
    Brochures for each individual model (except Cougar) showed a passenger side rear 3/4 view of the car against an atmospheric cloudy blue sky – with a passenger door open and bright white light emanating from the interior. Cougar was the same except the background was the reflective grid of a blue glass skyscraper facade.
    The print ads were in the atmospheric theme as well – Mercurys shown against backgrounds of autumnal country roads at dusk with fallen leaves strewn by the passing car, a rainstorm at night, an allee of trees with golden-hour sunlight streaming through.
    This background for the Grand Marquis ad was merely a red sky at night – referencing the old sailors adage, calling for good weather ahead – or The Fixx’s 1982 hit song? Or perhaps “red sky in morning, sailors warning” – implying the promise that Grand Marquis would be your safe haven against a coming storm.

  2. i think maybe they should be complimented for their brain-worm imagery: i hadn’t realized it was stuck somewhere in my matrix, but as soon as i saw the lead image, it came back to me.
    i never bought a gran marquis as a result of the ad, so maybe it’s only a partial triumph, but it did stick at some level. (i was a broke commuter college student when this ad ran, and even with an income, wouldn’t have considered a full-sized sedan then).

  3. In 1985 my Mom & Dad went to buy a new Lincoln Town Car. My dad was 5 years into his own medical practice and starting to finally feel successful, so after always buying used, they were going to splurge and buy brand new! Mom only had one hard requirement, and that was that it must have leather seats. With two small boys at home she wanted something she could wipe down with a wet rag (apparently we were messy or something). Anyway, there were no Town Cars available with leather on the lot that day, so they came home with a Mercury Grand Marquis, in gloss white with red leather interior. It was fully optioned, so much that the tail lights were the only thing differentiating it from it’s Lincoln brethren. She drove that until the early nineties when an oil pan issue basically killed the engine and made it unreliable for anything long-haul.

  4. “I’m not sure exactly what was going through the various heads and brains of Mercury’s marketing department back in 1989”

    Pretty sure the correct answer here is cocaine.

  5. “Car & Driver” long joked about a special de Sade edition of the Grand Marquis, so maybe this ad was Mercury’s subtle recognition of that joke.

    As for The Black Hole, I am surprised this film was never on Nathan Rabin’s Year Of Flops. I personally think time has been kinder to this film than when it came out, as a PG-rated Disney film was seen as rather shocking in 1979. The ending is still quite disturbing.

    1. The robot slicing up Norman Bates’ abdomen with a rotating blade claw was pretty heavy for 8 year old me. And crow-barring Hell into a space movie was certainly a bold choice.

  6. I actually think a take on this likely accidental car-hell association could be somewhat successful today.

    Nearly all car marketing involves images of people going on adventures and enjoying borderline impossible level of pristine nature. I rarely see any ads where the subject is trying to survive the modern commuter hellscape, despite how that’s what most cars are actually designed to do. Surprised we haven’t been getting a cynical, millenial-baiting “life’s an apocalyptic hellscape, but the inside of your Bronco Sport isn’t” campaign.

    1. :SCENE: Terrified and frustrated consumers wandering from dealership to dealership seeking cars only to be presented with crossovers and pickup trucks while the chorus chants “join us, join us” :SCENE:

  7. “I’m not sure exactly what was going through the various heads and brains of Mercury’s marketing department back in 1989, …”

    I was going to say, “cocaine,” but then I remembered that ’89 was post-crash. The “refreshments” budget would have been slashed by then, and they were likely experimenting with drain cleaner and dried banana peels.

  8. Sitting here in my current sleep deprived state, piping hot cuppa tea in my hand, and a long, sleepy day in front of me, this post is deeply confusing. I’ll come back later and try again.

  9. This was shortly before their “Imagine yourself in a Mercury” campaign, right? I didn’t know that was a spin-off of the less successful “Imagine yourself in Hell” campaign.

  10. Man y’all are having a Mercury Monday apparently. Two posts today, both featuring Mercurys (Mercuries??). Not complaining, I appreciate the alliterative theme.

      1. Maximillian scared the bleep out of me too, especially when his creator went inside him to survive.

        I watched the movie again when we first got Disney+. The space effects look fantastic. Everything else looks like they were shooting something for Wonderful World of Disney. It holds up about as well as a winter-driven Jeep TJ frame in an area where they use road salt.

      2. Maximilian!! That’s right! Dunno where I got Samson. Maybe I just tried to blank out as much of that movie as I could.

        All I really remember were those whirling blade hands he had.

        That’s the same movie, right? I’m not confusing it with some other movie, right?

        1. Yes the whirling blade hand that went into Anthony Perkins’ abdomen (off screen).

          I read one description of the scene that said Maximilian also pushed Perkins into an electrical panel, but that didn’t register with me at all. Just the thought of the puree’d intestines.

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