Posts Tagged ‘Cadillac’

Cadillac Voyage

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Concept cars have a way of summar­ising their eras perfectly. The 1988 Voyage concept from Cadillac was a veritable riot of technology, some of it digital — at a time when widespread consumer pixelage were just about visible on the horizon for the average punter.

Its computer — controlled running gear switched from rear-​​to four-​​wheel drive when it sensed a lass of traction. It came with disc brakes with electronic anti-​​lock system, independent suspension and an electron­ically controlled automatic gearbox. There was an early ‘route-​​finding’ piece of software, orthopedically-​​designed seats that included more than 20 pneumatic and mechanical adjust­ments, three memory positions, plus back and cushion heaters with cushion massage. Just the sort of thing that exists today, in other words, with your high-​​end Mercedes.

In the way that it managed to preempt many rpoduction features that were intro­duced in the 1990s, it was an undoubted success. And we think it looked pretty damn sexy — in a kind of Gerry Anderson sort of manner.

Logan’s Run style period marketing video strikes an alarm­ingly spooky note…

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Cars & Girls #2

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

One of the main avenues of expressive Americana is the motor car. And of course, the way the American dream has been sold, consumed and explored has always been through the car.

It’s no surprise, then, that the way cars have been sold have reflected the myriad of meaning that cars have had for American males: and equally little surprise that the female form has often offset the brawn of Detroit steel.

Some of these are classic, some of them are strange — but all are colourful.

Signs of the Times

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

There’s a good reason why DCI Gene Hunt drives the cars he does in Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes. Few things scream seventies louder than a golden-​​brown Mark III Ford Cortina, or eighties louder than a red Audi Quattro. Iconic, instantly-​​recognizable cars like this are easy cultural shorthand for their era. Stick one on screen and your eye is immedi­ately drawn to it. And if you make the car the star, maybe the TV company has to spend a little bit less on props and street scenes to make its drama feel properly period.

Gene Hunt's Mk 3 Cortina grounded Life on Mars on period

Iconic cars represent their era, but they reflect it too. Much as we’d like the car to exist in a bubble, unaffected by the trends and crises of the outside world, it just can’t. The car shapes the world: along with the computer and indus­tri­alized warfare, the car was one of the biggest influ­ences on the last century. Our lifestyles and our physical envir­onment are organized around it, but it influ­ences the culture too. The freedom offered by the internal combustion engine, whether fitted to a car or a motorbike, has energized music, art, liter­ature and whole youth movements.

The 1959 Caddy was designed in response to Sputnik's triumph

And in turn, the cars we drive are influ­enced by their times in exactly the same way as the clothes we wear and the music we listen to. Think of a fifties American car, and what do you see? A tail fin. What does a tail fin represent? The jet age: a period of intense techno­lo­gical and economic optimism – in America at least – in which speed and power were so venerated, and advancing so fast, that the cars started to look like planes, and the planes turned into the rockets that would take us into space. Car design of the period reflects that so perfectly that if you show someone a tailfin now, they’ll smell a drive-​​thru hotdog and hear a Chuck Berry record.

Look at the work of designers like Harley Earl at General Motors and Virgil Exner at Chrysler: one sounds like a rock’n’roller, the other like a character from a period sci-​​fi puppet show, but together they gave us some of the most exuberant car design ever seen, culmin­ating in Earl’s ’59 Cadillac Eldorado, his final and most outrageous work. And what did we get in austere fifties Britain? A steady diet of grim, grey, porridge saloons, with the apologetically-​​befinned Ford Anglia 105E only arriving in the same year they launched – almost literally – that Cadillac. Case closed.

Peter Sellars's mini exemplified sixties automotive style.

Same applies in the sixties. More than the Lamborghini Miura or the Jaguar E-​​type, I’d argue that the original Mini and Fiat 500 are the iconic cars of that decade: partly because their access­ib­ility put millions more on wheels, but also because they reflect the class­lessness of the time; a Mini might have been your first car, but the Beatles and Peter Sellers drove them too.

Seventies? Harder to identify an icon, but that just proves the point. Beset by reces­sions and oil crises, the car industry lacked the confidence it had in the previous two decades, and it shows in the cars it produced; there were some great supercars like the awesome, angular Countach, but from makers which lurched from owner to official receiver and often lacked the cash to put the wheels on. There was a definite seventies look – Hunt’s Cortina being the perfect European example – but few stand-​​out cars. Frightened by the price of petrol and the threat of the sack, people wanted reliab­ility and afford­ab­ility in everything; this was the quartz watch decade. In cars, in the US, this mood killed the big-​​block V8 engine. In Europe and Japan, it spawned the hatchback; VW launched the Golf, and Toyota’s Corolla broke out of Japan and began its ascent to become the world’s best-​​selling model.

The aggressively proportioned Countach reflected the eighties' power-focused concerns

Things were better in the eighties: greed was good, and made near-​​200mph supercars like the Ferrari F40 and Porsche 959 both socially acceptable and econom­ically viable. The Quattro and hot hatches made a little of that mojo available to those not in receipt of a Gordon Gecko-​​sized bonus.

Nineties and noughties? Maybe we’re still too close to spot the real icons, and what they say about the times. The nineties produced arguably the greatest car ever made in the McLaren F1, but reces­sions and economic crises in Asia and Latin America brought the uncer­tainty back: for all its incan­descent performance, only 71 road-​​going F1s were sold.

Autocar magazine’s readers have just voted the current Range Rover the car of the noughties, but I’d disagree; by the time the decade ended the zeitgeist had turned so decis­ively against big SUVs that – for all its ability – I think it gets disqual­ified. Instead, I’d nominate the Prius. As a hybrid in a unique bodyshell, not only is it arguably green, but it’s obviously, visually green. That’s why diCaprio and Diaz are always seen in theirs. It tells other people you’re doing your bit, even though you’re still driving a car and probably haven’t altered the rest of your lifestyle much.

How noughties is that? Maybe, thirty years hence, when the BBC makes a retro cop-​​drama set in 2009, the lead character PC PC will drive a Prius, but decline to get into car chases because they’re ‘just not sustainable’.

Global recalls and eco piety – the Prius is the auto icon of the noughties.

Nudie Cohn Rocks!

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Well, he may have made the kicking-​​est Country and Western suits this side of the Rockies, but we really dig the way Nudie Cohn kitted out his Caddies in appro­priate style.

Known for dressing luminaries such as Elvis Presley and Gram Parsons (pictured), as well as besuiting Roy Hollywood cowboy Roy Rogers and music legend Hank Williams, Nudie Cohn was a Ukrainian born jew whose arrival in 1940s Hollywood saw a man in the right place at the right time.

His taste in expansive, bejew­elled whale-​​autos distin­guished him from many a rhinestone cowboy plying their trade.  It was boom time in California, and the film business was making hundreds of cowboy films a year. Nudie saw the gap in the market and made a killing. He made so much of a killing, in fact, that he would appar­ently distribute dollar bills on the street in Los Angeles with a sticker with his face on.

He  also  created a fleet of 18 glittering customised cruisers that mirrored his inimitable sartorial style (see pic above).

Hail a true original.
Find out more and visit the Nudie Museum here

Gangster Lean

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

Everyone loves a gangster movie. And there can’t have been many gangster flicks that didn’t feature a healthy garage full of bad-​​boy motors. Right from the beginning of the movie industry cars have been icons loaded with meaning. When repres­enting arche­types like villains, filmmakers from Ealing Studios to the Parisian Left Bank (not to mention Hollywood) have hooked up our most infamous characters with cars that have repres­ented everything from exist­ential ennui to oedipal mother love. Here are some of our favourites.

Think of the classic Brit flick of 1969 The Italian Job and what immedi­ately comes to mind is the trio of Mini Coopers blasting through the backstreets of Rome. But the preter­nat­urally beautiful opening sequence of the film, in which a Lamborghini Miura dances through a succession of alpine bends is absolute poetry in motion.

In 1971’s Get Carter, perhaps the best known and darkest British gangster movie of all time, there the classic getaway vehicle is featured, the MK 2 Jag. The Mk 2 represents a very British, very working class brand of hard-​​won sophist­ic­ation and brutal potency which is embodied in the flesh by the hard-​​as-​​nails Jack Carter, played by Michael Caine.

A lesser known, and certainly less successful Brit gangster flick was Villain, which also opened in cinemas in 1971 (which is probably why it flopped). A vodka-​​saturated Richard Burton plays Vic Dakin, the brutal, misogyn­istic central character in a vaguely absurd, cartoon cockney manner. Dakin and his crew plan a classic five vehicle heist (Jag Mk2, two Zephyr Zodiacs, and a couple of Triumphs). It all, predictably, goes horribly wrong. There’s a hilarious payoff at the end when Burton’s character ends up collecting a bundle of cash from the mattress where his beloved muvva lays and drinks endless cups of tea brought to her by her devoted but pyscho­pathic prodigy.

On the other side of the pond, meanwhile, French filmmakers of a more overtly philo­sophical bent had been refer­encing Hollywood gangster movies of old, whilst setting the action in a European setting with quint­es­sen­tially European characters. In one of the better known films of this era, Francois Truffaut’s A Bout de Soufflé (Breathless) dinky little Renaults perform the walk-​​on parts whilst the starring roles are reserved for Thunderbirds and Chevrolets. Stripped down monochro­matic fun.

In Jean-​​Pierre Melville’s beautiful and highly influ­ential Le Samourai, however, the lone assassin (played by French movie heart throb Alain Delon) scores a set of skeleton keys which can open any DS ever built. The main protag­onist goes on to use a succession of the iconic Citroens to ferry him about from hit-​​to-​​hit. The plot device in which the car becomes a universal conduit of murderous intent has been copied by directors as diverse as Hong Kong director John Woo (The Killer) and Jim Jarmusch (Ghostdog).

In complete contrast to Melville’s sparse symbolism, Martin Scorcese uses the cacophony of a full fleet of exploding Cadillacs to signify the inevitable fall-​​from-​​grace of a big time crook .

For gangsters in the movies, flash motors and nefarious intent are fatally inter­twined. Feel free to send us sugges­tions for your favourite automotive dispatches from the cinematic underworld.