What Are Your Favorite Movie, TV, and Anime Cars That Aren’t The Usual Suspects?

Movie Cars Aa Ts
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Make no mistake, we absolutely love Back to the Future‘s DeLorean time machine, KITT from Knight Rider, The Munsters‘ Koach and Dragula, and all the Batmobiles minus the Joel Schumacher ones. But for this round of cool-cars from the screens both small and silver, we want to hear about your favorites that aren’t the all-time greats. Not the usual suspects, as beloved as they may be. Give us your deep pulls. You know, stuff like this:

Hollywood Cars Collage

From the top, that’s the AMC Hornet James Bond corkscrew-jumps in To Live and Let Die, the Porsche 911 from Death Race (2008), Jim Rockford’s Firebird (performer of TV’s finest J-turns), and the hot-rod Fiat 500 from Lupin III–the directorial debut of Hayao Miyazaki. He’s done a few things.

So watcha got? Whether your picks are over the top (like the Damnation Alley Landmaster included in the top shot), super obscure (like the Italdesign Aztec from Frankenstein Unbound, also in the top shot) or just regular cars that are well-cast, we want to hear about ’em. And throw in some stinkers too, why not. There’s no rules.

See you in the comments!

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312 thoughts on “What Are Your Favorite Movie, TV, and Anime Cars That Aren’t The Usual Suspects?

    1. Wow, another movie that NO ONE HAS EVER SEEN EXCEPT ME AND YOU.
      I loved it up in the tree because they forgot to turn off the winch.

  1. ’66 Lincoln Continental George Barris “Deathmobile” from Animal House. The vehicular equivalent to chugging a bottle of Jack 😀

    1. Ooo, yes! Ford had a good couple of years there for cool movie cars, because my other favorite was Buckaroo Banzai’s “88 Jetcar”, which was a converted F-150.

  2. I have two: both 2nd-Gen K5s

    Charlton Heston’s (custom) Blazer from Earthquake.

    Roy Scheider’s Blazer from JAWS is a close second.

    1. Genius picks. As a kid I always loved the scene where Heston foils a car thief/looter because the guy can’t figure out the controls of the Blazer.

          1. Yep! Scheider’s character in each (Buddy Russo in the French Connection, Sonny Grosso in the Seven Ups) is based on the same real-life NYC detective.

                1. And the real life cops themselves appear in the French Connection as well, the the dubious police captain who yells at Popeye and one of the feds IIRC.

    1. I liked Jackie Chan’s 4WD Turbo (and rocket-powered) Subaru DL. Chan was famously contracted with Mitsubishi for all of his Hong Kong movies, so I always wondered how he felt about using a Subaru in Cannonball Run.

  3. I’ve got to give a shout to the dark green 1977/78 Dodge Monaco from the tv series Hunter. I got to drive one of these police package Monacos with a factory 440. It was amazingly fast and handled better than you would think. These Monaco/Fury twins served as police cars and bad guy cars for just about every tv show and movie made in the 80’s. After driving one, it’s easy to understand why stunt drivers liked them so much.

    1. Good call.
      When I was a kid we used to play Tremors at the junk yard near my house.
      Like “the floor is lava” on old rusty junkers.
      All fun and games until…

  4. I’m a big fan of the Jeep-esque vehicle the Heelers have in the kids show Bluey. It definitely has the vibe of a fun adventure vehicle, even though it’s proportions are extra goofy and it’s exactly the sort of family vehicle I don’t promote. Save the vans!

    I have young children so this is basically all I watch anymore. That and oddly the first two seasons of Scooby Doo Where Are You.

    Edit: Also, as a child who spent a lot of time watching syndicated Columbo episodes while at my Grandmother’s house (with one TV I assure you I had no control over), I always oddly dug his Peugeot 403. Looking back, just a good car/character pairing.

    1. I too love the Heelers’ SUV. Even the color is cool. FYI there is a toy version of it available (in case your kids haven’t already cajoled you into buying it). I’d say it’s roughly 1:32 scale, so it’s not too dinky (or Dinky).

  5. I’m gonna assume it’s a usual suspect, but if James Bond and Jim Rockford constitute “deep pulls”… 🙂

    A 1974 Dodge sedan.

    It’s got a cop motor – a 440 cubic inch plant. Car’s got a lot of pickup.

  6. Urban Assault Vehicle from Stripes.

    Oldsmobile from Beverly Hillbillies. Somehow I pictured that back when David Tracy announced he was moving to California.

    1. Come and listen to a story bout a man named Dave
      Trench foot, shower spaghetti, some folks thought him brave

      Then one he day he was just a blogging dude
      And up came Torch and a site with attitude

      Autopian, that is. Tail lights. Obscure car parts.

      Well the first thing you know ol’ Dave took a look round there
      Blogfolks said ‘Dave move away from there’
      Said ‘Californy is the place you ought to be’
      So he loaded up the Jeep then bought a used i3

      I should probably apologize to a lot of people for this, but I won’t.

    2. Coincidentally I sourced some parts for a GMC Motorhome this morning. It just might fall under “the usual suspects” though depending on your age.

      1. If you are hoarding GM motorhome parts, seek help. If you are restoring or keeping one on the road, I bow to you. I’m not worhty!

        1. Neither, we’re a NAPA store and they needed an A/C compressor and a drier. Although I’ve had an unnatural want for one of these for a few years now.

  7. (Checks name).

    Well, other than that, the caddy from ‘license to drive’. Big old boat!!! Perfect car for when you’re sixteen

    1. Yes! 1972 Cadillac Sedan deVille. Go ahead and leave the Frank Sinatra in the tape deck as well! It’s funny how when the movie came out in ’88 that Caddy already looked the part of a classic when it was only 16 years old. Somehow the movie wouldn’t be the same if it were made today and the hero car was an ’07 DTS.

  8. Dimension W had a 2000 GT and an LFA which were well represented, but my favorite is still the pre modified 1967 GTO from xXx

    1. I loved the rare times they’d actually open the doors, mostly when Brian Keith got older.

      Just like how rare it was to see Magnum drive around with the top in place on the 308.

    2. I loved that show. I haven’t seen an episode in decades so I’m sure it hasn’t aged well, but I liked it enough to even record the theme song with my tape deck up against the tv.

      1. Because Brian Keith threatened to quit if they made him get into the original again (or so I heard).
        Chuck Norris deove a Thunderbird SC in one of his movies, IIRC.

      1. And per the rules of ’80s action tv car chases, it was about as fast as a street-legal prototype race car and every bad guy driving whatever boxy sedan they had.

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