The futuristic film car Audi RSQ was presented to the public for the first time on April 7, 2004 at the New York International Automobile Show. Audi tackles its most ambitious product placement project ever: For the epic event motion picture �I, ROBOT�, Audi Design developed the spectacular vehicle, which helps leading actor Will Smith � a homicide detective in the year 2035 � solve a mystery that could have grave consequences for the human race. Fox releases �I, ROBOT� in the U.S. on July 16; the film arrives in Germany in August.
In the near future, technology and robots are a trusted part of everyday life. In �I, ROBOT�, that trust is broken and one man, alone against the system, sees it coming. The film employs spectacular visual effects innovations beyond any ever put on screen, to bring a world of robots to life. The film is directed
by Alex Proyas (Dark City, The Crow) and is set in a world created by famed science fiction writer Isaac Asimov in his short story collection �I, ROBOT�.
The resulting Audi RSQ sport coupe is a visionary interpretation of Audi�s typical design language. The most important thing was that despite its extreme character the car should still be recognized as an Audi. The cinemagoer will therefore see the new Audi front-end with the typical single-frame grille in the movie.
The RSQ includes special features suggested by movie director Alex Proyas. The mid-engined sports car operated by the story�s police department, races through the Chicago of the future not on wheels but on spheres. Its two doors are rear-hinged to the C-posts of the body and open according to the butterfly principle.
In addition to the RSQ concept car, Audi supplied further volume-production cars which appear � in disguised shapes � in the movie�s traffic scenes. Audi also supplied the interior mock-up used for interior car scenes.
With this project Audi opens up a new chapter in product placement. Previously, the brand with the four rings has always supplied volume-production cars to movie productions. In individual cases, such as �Mission: Impossible II,� these cars were even used in movies before their market launch. With �I, ROBOT� and the systematic development of a �car of the future,� Audi goes far beyond its previous product placement activities.
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