The Smurfs (found animated National Benzole commercial series; 1978): Difference between revisions

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[[File:Ukanimations1.jpg|200px|thumb|right|1978 magazine showing screenshots of the commercials.]]
[[File:Ukanimations1.jpg|200px|thumb|right|1978 magazine showing screenshots of the commercials.]]
In 1978, National Benzole (A now defunct gas chain) promoted the company by selling smurfs merchandise in the UK. To promote The Smurfs, National Benzole created a series of animated commercials between 1978 and 1979 that featured smurfs checking cars with the instrumental version of Dutch singer Vader Abraham's "Smurf Song" (Het Smurfenlied) with the slogan "You Get Service With A Smurf" (The "Smurf Song" medley and the slogan would later be carried for BP commercials in Australia featuring The Smurfs along with Papa Smurf in the mid 1980's) which came out the previous year to promote the release of "The Smurfs And The Magic Flute" which later gained it's first English dub in 1979. These commercials were notable for having a very different animation style compared to the well-known Hannah Barbera series.
In 1978, National Benzole (A now defunct gas chain) promoted the company by selling smurfs merchandise in the UK. To promote The Smurfs, National Benzole created a series of animated commercials which began on May 20th 1978 that featured smurfs checking cars with the instrumental version of Dutch singer Vader Abraham's "Smurf Song" (Het Smurfenlied) which came out the previous year to promote the release of "The Smurfs And The Magic Flute" which later gained it's first English dub in 1979. These commercials were notable for having a very different animation style compared to the well-known Hannah Barbera series. The slogan for The Smurfs promoting the company was slogan "You Get Service With A Smurf". After the campaign ended, the "Smurf Song" along with the slogan would be reused for Australian commercials for BP in the mid 1980's. The difference between the National Benzole and BP smurfs commercials is that Papa Smurf is checking on the smurfs taking care of a gas station,cleaning cars, and the store in the Australian ads while National Smurf (A smurf created exclusively for National's commercials) was checking on the cars and is seen driving off.


These commercials hadn't resurfaced on the Internet until 2013 when the official Youtube channel for BP uploaded one of the commercials.
These commercials hadn't resurfaced on the Internet until 2013 when the official Youtube channel for BP uploaded one of the commercials.

Revision as of 19:59, 19 December 2016

1978 magazine showing screenshots of the commercials.

In 1978, National Benzole (A now defunct gas chain) promoted the company by selling smurfs merchandise in the UK. To promote The Smurfs, National Benzole created a series of animated commercials which began on May 20th 1978 that featured smurfs checking cars with the instrumental version of Dutch singer Vader Abraham's "Smurf Song" (Het Smurfenlied) which came out the previous year to promote the release of "The Smurfs And The Magic Flute" which later gained it's first English dub in 1979. These commercials were notable for having a very different animation style compared to the well-known Hannah Barbera series. The slogan for The Smurfs promoting the company was slogan "You Get Service With A Smurf". After the campaign ended, the "Smurf Song" along with the slogan would be reused for Australian commercials for BP in the mid 1980's. The difference between the National Benzole and BP smurfs commercials is that Papa Smurf is checking on the smurfs taking care of a gas station,cleaning cars, and the store in the Australian ads while National Smurf (A smurf created exclusively for National's commercials) was checking on the cars and is seen driving off.

These commercials hadn't resurfaced on the Internet until 2013 when the official Youtube channel for BP uploaded one of the commercials.