Flying car (fiction)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In fiction a flying car is a car that can be flown in much the same manner as a car may be driven. In some cases a flying car can also be driven on roads.
Flying cars usually appear in science fiction, but some fantasy films, such as Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, employ the same motif. In most cases the exact mechanism for achieving flight is never revealed.
In addition, flying cars have become a running joke; the term "where is my flying car" is emblematic of the supposed failure of modern technology to match unrealistic futuristic visions that were promoted in earlier decades.
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[edit] Science fiction
In science fiction, the vision of a flying car is usually a practical aircraft that the average person can fly directly from any point to another (e.g. from home to work or to the supermarket) without the requirement for roads, runways or other specially-prepared operating areas, and they often start and land in a garage or on a parking lot. In addition, the science-fiction version of the flying car typically resembles a conventional car with no visible means of propulsion, rather than an aeroplane.
A flying car is subtly different from a hovercar which flies at an altitude of a few meters.
[edit] Where are the flying cars?
Complaints of the non-existence of flying cars have become nearly idiomatic as expressions of disappointment in the failure of the present to measure up to the glory of past predictions.
A "Calvin and Hobbes" 1989 strip was an early instance of the "Where are the flying cars?" idea:
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- Hobbes: "A new decade is coming up."
- Calvin: "Yeah, big deal! Hmph. Where are the flying cars? Where are the moon colonies? Where are the personal robots and the zero-gravity boots, huh? You call this a new decade?! You call this the future?? HA! Where are the rocket packs? Where are the disintegration rays? Where are the floating cities?"[1]
A memorable 2001 IBM television commercial featured Avery Brooks (of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine fame) complaining "It is the year 2000, but where are the flying cars? I was promised flying cars. I don’t see any flying cars. Why? Why? Why?"
Comedian Lewis Black had a similar routine early in the decade: "This new millennium sucks! It's exactly the same as the old millennium! You know why? No flying cars!"
[edit] Examples
- The 1974 James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun portrayed the villain escaping in a 1974 AMC Matador with a jet engine and wings mounted to the roof.
- In the Blade Runner movie, important people, police, and Harrison Ford use "Spinners", antigravity flying cars, to move in the futuristic cyberpunk Los Angeles of 2019.
- The Flying Car was a humorous short film written by Kevin Smith in 2002 for The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
[edit] See also
- Hovercar (fiction)
- Flying car (aircraft)
- List of fictional vehicles - Flying cars and personal spacecraft
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Roadable Times - pictures and descriptions of over 70 designs of flying cars and roadable aircraft, past and present
- Waterman Aerobile at the Smithsonian
- Flying cars in 25 years (BBC News Online)
- How Flying Cars Will Work from HowStuffWorks
- Tales of Future Past
- X-Hawk from HowStuffWorks
- Future Flying Cars