Generational heresy alert: I've always hated Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
Maybe I'm a killjoy, but I thought the titular character was a spoiled brat who needed to learn that actions have consequences. Plus, even a replica of a Ferrari 250 GT California doesn't deserve to end up in a ravine.
It was with great satisfaction, then, that I watched Honda's Super Bowl commercial. A grown-up Matthew Broderick played hooky and sleepwalked through some Ferris-style hijinks. His car of choice? A Honda CR-V. Talk about accepting responsibility. Ask any CR-V owner why they decided to put one in their driveway and the answer will invariably include the phrase, "after our youngest was born," or "good in the snow." You can't outrun Mr. Rooney forever.
Ask any CR-V owner why they decided to put one in their driveway and the answer will invariably include the phrase, 'after our youngest was born,' or 'good in the snow.'I got a chance to drive a 2012 CR-V AWD EX-L (Honda apparently glued down the caps lock keys in their marketing department), an all-wheel drive model featuring a leather interior and an in-dash navigation system. It's not a midday romp through the Art Institute of Chicago, but it's no lecture on the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, either. You'll definitely feel like you're getting away with something when you look at the window sticker, too: Fully loaded, the CR-V tops out at about $30,000, and the base model starts at just $22,295.
Like the Civic, the CR-V got a conservative redesign for 2012. While the refreshed sheetmetal won't have valets wondering if Abe Froman is in town (last movie reference, I promise), it does make the Honda crossover look approximately 80 percent more like an Isuzu Axiom. The rear doors open wide, though the rear liftgate isn't powered.




