List of ''Cars'' characters
This is a list of characters from the Pixar franchise Cars, as well as the Disney franchise Planes, which is set in the same fictional universe:
- the 2006 film Cars
- the 2011 film Cars 2
- the 2017 film Cars 3
- the 2013 film Planes
- the 2014 film Planes: Fire & Rescue
Piston Cup teams
Rust-eze Medicated Bumper Ointment team
Lightning McQueen
Lightning McQueen, often referred to as "McQueen", is the main character in Cars and Cars 3. He is voiced by Owen Wilson. McQueen is not modeled directly after a specific make and model, although his design contains some elements inspired by the Chevrolet Corvette C6. His Corvette lineage is further suggested by the "retro" paint scheme he acquires in Radiator Springs, which resembles that of a Corvette C1.
Mack
Mack (voiced by John Ratzenberger) is a 1985 Mack Super-Liner bearing license plate "RUSTEZ3". A dedicated member of the Rust-eze Medicated Bumper Ointment Team (and now Dinoco Oil), having the role of McQueen's (and now Ramirez's) transport, Mack pulls Lightning McQueen's (and now Cruz Ramirez's) trailer to his (and now her) races. Lightning's one loyal teammate after his entire pit crew resigns in protest at the end of the season decider, he inadvertently sets up the predicament suffered by McQueen throughout the movie. The grill on him suggests a nose and his top cover (with the Rusteze logo) suggests a baseball-style cap.
McQueen exhorts Mack to drive through the night to his tiebreaker race with Chick Hicks and The King in Los Angeles, despite federal DOT regulations which legally grant Mack ten hours daily of much-needed off-duty rest[1] alongside "all those sleeping trucks" at the last truck stop on I-40. Lightning hopes to reach the venue first and to hang out with the Dinoco team. As a result, Mack falls asleep and, distracted by the Delinquent Road Hazards (who attempt to push him off the road to the shoulder), loses Lightning. Mack arrives in Radiator Springs after Doc reveals Lightning's location and is both very relieved ("Thank the manufacturer, you're alive!") and apologetic ("I'm so sorry I lost you, boss. I'll make it up to you..."). Lightning, who is glad to see him, forgives him.
Mack acts as Lightning's pit crew for the big race (since he has none) and worriedly asks if he's alright when he spins out, just before Doc and the others show up to help. During the closing credits, Mack views automotive versions of previous Pixar films (such as Toy Car Story and Monster Trucks, Inc.) at a restored 1950s drive-in cinema. Commenting on other characters played by John Ratzenberger (including Hamm the piggy truck and the Abominable Snowplow), he eagerly applauds each of them until he realizes they're all played by the same actor, then demands to know "what kind of cut-rate production is this?!"
"This one is a homage to my father... John Lasseter knew that my father drove a Mack truck and that's why he gave me this character. The truck was one of my first loves because I used to ride around with him in it from time to time."— John Ratzenberger[2]
Allentown Mayor Ed Pawlowski proclaimed April 21, 2006, Friday Mack Trucks-Disney/Pixar "Cars" Day[3] in Mack's honor during the 41-city "CARS Road Trip '06" promotional tour.[4]
Mack is seen in the short Mater and the Ghostlight after Lightning established his headquarters on US Route 66. In Cars 2 he appears in a pair of brief cameo appearances at the start and end, where his two lines are "Oh, his best friend greetings. They get longer every year," and "Oh, those two are perfect for each other." He is set to appear in Cars 3.
Chuck and McQueen's pit crew
Lightning McQueen's pit crew are generic forklifts who only appear at the start of the film, never to be acknowledged again. They quit after Mcqueen said that he is a one-man show. One of them, presumably the acting crew chief is voiced by Mike "No Name" Nelson, not to be confused with Michael J. Nelson. After the official crew chief had decided to quit, he is referred to by McQueen as "Chuck", and retorts angrily afterwards, "And my name is not Chuck!" In the credits, he is referred to as "Not Chuck". They appear in the film (only to leave almost immediately) to show McQueen's selfishness and inability to work with others. McQueen had a crew chief before the film, but was not seen in the film, because McQueen fired him (believing he was a one-man show, which later came back to haunt him for his return). The chief was mentioned several times at the Dinoco 400 race. The crew is later replaced by McQueen's friends from Radiator Springs and Mack for the big race. In Cars 2, McQueen has apparently hired a new pit crew as he mentions having given them all a vacation when asked to attend the World Grand Prix, but his friends from Radiator Springs again offer to become his crew for a race and he accepts.
Harv
Harv is Lightning McQueen's agent. Never seen on-screen, McQueen speaks to Harv via his speaker phone when McQueen and Mack are on route to the tiebreaker race and again when Mack is in Radiator Springs to pick up McQueen. Consequently, very little is known of Harv's character except that he threatened to fire Mack if he doesn't get McQueen into his trailer.
Harv is voiced by Jeremy Piven in the U.S. version and The Grand Tour presenter Jeremy Clarkson in the UK version. He is also based on the character Ari Gold from the HBO series Entourage. Although he is not seen in the actual film, Jeremy Clarkson believes that he is a 1979 Ford Granada Ghia while the American version, he is thought to be a 1996 Oldsmobile.
Rusty and Dusty Rust-eze
The Rust-eze Brothers, Rusty and Dusty, are the spokescars and owners of Rust-Eze, the team that sponsors Lightning and that gave him his "big break", they are somewhat awkward. Rusty is a 1963 Dodge Dart and Dusty, a 1967 Dodge A100. Rusty and Dusty are voiced by real-life brothers Tom and Ray Magliozzi (respectively) of National Public Radio's Car Talk, using that program's closing line "...and don't drive like my brother!". Rusty bears an intentional resemblance to Tom Magliozzi's infamous green 1963 Dart, named "The Dartre".[5]
They appear three times in the first film, at the beginning with McQueen looking forward to leaving them, in the middle very briefly being interviewed and at the end after the race when McQueen realises he is happy with them. In a deleted scene on the DVD, much of their dialogue (heard at the sponsors' tent in the final script) was originally part of a brief stop at the Top Down Truck Stop. On the die-cast cars, Rusty's license plate states "Rust" and Dusty's sports "Eze". Their license plates are from "R Fair City", a term the Car Talk brothers use to describe their home town of Cambridge, Massachusetts. They appear three times in the third film, when McQueen was going to see Cal Weathers, when the Radiator Springs gang members and McQueen were talking on the phone and at the Rust-eze racing center to hand the sponsor over to Sterling.
Sterling
Sterling is the owner of the Rust-eze Racing Center. He reveals himself to be a fan of Lightning McQueen. He assigns Cruz Ramirez to train McQueen and prepare him for the Florida 500. After watching McQueen's poor performance on the simulator, Sterling attempted to convince McQueen to retire and become a racing brand. McQueen convinces him to give him a chance at winning the Florida 500, then McQueen could decide when to stop racing. Sterling reluctantly agrees.
At the Florida 500, Sterling reveals himself as greedy and selfcentered when he rudely ordered Cruz to leave and resume her job as a trainer. Against Sterling's will, McQueen puts Cruz in the race. After Cruz wins, Sterling asks her to race for him, but she refuses. Tex Dinoco, owner of Dinoco, purchases Rust-eze, allowing Cruz to race and McQueen to train her.
He is voiced by Nathan Fillion.
Hamilton
A personal voice command assistant to Cruz Ramirez that's able to track McQueen's speed through his electronic suit. Played by British Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton.
Cruz Ramirez
Cruz Ramirez, a Hispanic female, is Lightning McQueen's trainer and technician at the Rust-eze Racing Center. She is known for training some of the best newer elite rookies through her unconventional training methods. She is assigned to train McQueen for the Florida 500. She attempts to train McQueen at Fireball Beach, but McQueen ends up teaching her how to race on sand. After surviving a Demolition Derby, which Cruz wins, McQueen lashes out on her for wasting his time. Then, Cruz reveals that she always wanted to be a racer, but never found the confidence to do so.
Cruz and McQueen reconcile and head to Thomasville where they meet the former crew chief of Doc Hudson, Smokey. Smokey trains McQueen and inspires Cruz as well. At the Florida 500, Cruz is sent back to the Racing Center. McQueen exits the race to allow Cruz to race. Using what she's learned on the road, Cruz catches up to Jackson Storm, who tries to overtake her. However, Cruz flips over him and lands in first place. She begins to race for the Dinoco team, sporting #51, with McQueen as her mentor.
Cruz is voiced by Cristela Alonzo.
Dinoco team
Strip "The King" Weathers
Strip Weathers, better known as The King, is a "Dinoco-blue" veteran racecar and racing legend voiced by NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty. Weathers is an anthropomorphic version of Petty's aerodynamic 1970 Plymouth Superbird, sporting same shade of blue and Petty's racecar number, 43.[6] He is one of the racecars in the 2006 Piston Cup three-way tie, along with Chick Hicks and Lightning McQueen. His sponsor (Dinoco), like Petty's (STP), is a well-known oil company.
He is Dinoco's "Golden Boy", having won seven Piston Cups (the same number of NASCAR Cup Series championships Petty himself won in his career) and is hoping for another in the tiebreaker race before entering retirement. He tells McQueen to remember the importance of his team, but the rookie does not pay any attention, being more preoccupied with the thought of taking over the Dinoco sponsorship after Weathers' retirement.
On the final lap of the tie-breaker race, Hicks rams into Weathers, sending him into a dangerous rollover. When McQueen sees this, he realizes that Weathers' career might end the way Doc Hudson's did. After stopping short of the finish line, allowing Hicks to win, McQueen pushes Weathers across the finish line to let him finish his last race before his retirement, much to the audience's delight. Weathers is last seen visiting the racing museum in Radiator Springs with his wife and another Piston Cup racer, "Junior", stating that Hudson was his inspiration (In NASCAR, "The King" #43 is the second of four generations of racers; his father Lee Petty won his first Cup in 1954, one year after the multiple Fabulous Hudson Hornet victories).
He returns in Cars 3 as the crew chief of his nephew and new Dinoco racer Cal Weathers with Richard Petty reprising his role as the voice of The King.
In the Danish edition of the movie, the King is voiced by nine-time 24 Hours of Le Mans winner Tom Kristensen. In the Finnish edition of the movie, The King is voiced by Finnish two-time Formula One World Champion Mika Häkkinen. In the German edition, he is voiced by Austrian three-time Formula One World Champion Niki Lauda.
Strip Weathers also appears in the film's video game as an unlockable character in the Arcade. He is mentioned by Darrell Cartrip in the game's Story Mode.
He also appears in Disney Infinity.
Lynda Weathers
Lynda Weathers, also known as "Mrs. The King", (voiced by Richard Petty's wife Lynda Petty) is similar in design to a station wagon that brought the Petty family to "The King"'s races during the 1970s. Like Tex, Lynda follows each race from a Dinoco VIP booth, rooting for the #43 car. Throughout the film, she is constantly shown supporting her husband and she worries deeply when he is flipped by Chick Hicks. After the race, she kisses Lightning on the cheek to thank him for helping out her husband.
During the ending credits of Cars, Mrs. The King can be seen at the Doc Hudson Museum with her husband and Mater as a tour guide throughout the museum. She asks to see and meet Doc Hudson, but Mater is unsure of his whereabouts at the present time – but assumes he is out racing, most likely with McQueen (which turns out to be true).
Cal Weathers
New Dinoco racer. Took over as Dinoco racer after his uncle Strip Weathers retired and became his crew chief. Cal Weathers be numbered 42, and is a Piston Cup Stock Car with blue rims. He is voiced by real life driver Kyle Petty who is Richard Petty's son.
Tex Dinoco
Tex Dinoco, voiced by Humpy Wheeler of Charlotte Motor Speedway, is the owner of Dinoco. Packaged as "Tex Dinoco with bullhorns" as a diecast car, he is simply called "Tex" in the film's credits. He speaks with a Carolina accent and resembles a 1975 Cadillac Coupe de Ville at The Big Texan Steak Ranch in Amarillo. He is the King's manager and sponsor. Unlike Lightning's agent (Harv, who doesn't watch the race), Tex is an avid race fan who would never miss a race. As a supportive and long-time friend of both Lynda and "The King", he has been a loyal fan of the #43 car for many years and boasts that The King "has made Dinoco proud".
After Chick Hicks wins by employing a PIT maneuver to sabotage The King in the final lap of the tiebreaker, sending the Dinoco blue #43 car into a dangerous rollover crash, Tex offers the lucrative sponsorship to Lightning with the explanation that "there's a whole lot more to racing than just winning" this is an echo of a line that Mcqueen used at the end of the race shown at the start of the film but with an entirely different meaning.
He returns for Cars 3 as the sponsor for Cal Weathers. After Cal retired, Tex saught to have newcomer Cruz Ramirez to race for him after watching her performance in the Florida 500. He also purchases Rust-eze from Sterling and allows Lightning McQueen to continue racing.
Rotor Turbosky
The Dinoco Transport Helicopter is based on a Bell 430. Without a speaking part, he has no voice actor and is not named in the closing credits. His name is Rotor Turbosky (in apparent reference to helicopter maker Sikorsky) in the die-cast Cars toy collection. He is seen on top of the Dinoco tent during the races. Mater gets a ride over Radiator Springs at the end of the film, a favor which Lightning had promised Mater earlier when dreaming of the big trophy and the big sponsor (Dinoco) with the fancy helicopter.
Hostile Takeover Bank team
Chick Hicks
Chick Hicks (voiced by Michael Keaton) serves as Lightning McQueen's primary rival in the first film. He is "a generic Pixar design, 'a stock 1980s American car'" according to Pixar publicity coordinator Amanda Sorena,[7] and strongly resembles a GM G-body with features from both the Chevrolet Monte Carlo and the Buick Grand National. As the real-life General Motors wanted nothing to do with the character by rejecting an initial Pixar proposal to cast a Chevrolet stock car as the movie's villain, Chick is effectively an orphan.[7] He has spent his entire career trailing Strip "The King" Weathers, and is bitter about this fact. His racing sponsor is Hostile Takeover Bank (HTB for short).
His pit crew are mean to Guido as they underestimate him for being tiny; his skills are later shown to be far superior to their own. Hicks' racing number is 86, a reference to 1986, the year Pixar Animation Studios was founded; 86 itself is also a slang term for destroying or getting rid of something. Since 86 is twice the number 43 (King's number), it could also be an allusion to his entire career in relation to King.
Determined to do whatever it takes to win, Hicks will often ram other cars or use the PIT maneuver in an attempt to cause racing incidents for his own benefit. He despises and mocks McQueen, adopting the nickname Thunder which McQueen previously used as a put-down (McQueen: "Because thunder always comes after 'lightning'"). Hicks is also equally antagonistic towards The King, having come 2nd place to The King his entire career. While McQueen is presumed missing, Hicks tries to take away McQueen's fans and increase his fame.
During the final lap of the tie-breaker race, Hicks (who is then determined not to come in behind Strip Weathers again) PITs The King, sending him flying off the race track and into a roll-over wreck on the in-field. He expects a huge ovation after McQueen deliberately gives up the Piston Cup in order to help Weathers and instead finds resistance from everyone who watched what he did to Weathers. An angered crowd and media snub Hicks' victory by branding him as a cheater. He is pelted with discarded tires and booed off the stage with his trophy in humiliation. The immediate backlash is similar to backlash against Rusty Wallace after he spun out Darrell Waltrip in Turn 4 during Segment 3, Lap 9 of the Sprint All-Star Race V at Charlotte Motor Speedway, sending Waltrip spinning into the grass. In the film, a lucrative corporate sponsorship is at stake. Hicks and McQueen both share the dream of being the new face of Dinoco Oil, a firm long represented by retiring champion #43 "The King". They race on the assumption that winning the championship cup will land them the big sponsor, however Dinoco owner Tex offers the sponsorship to McQueen, stating that there's more to racing than winning.
He returns in Cars 3, where he now hosts his own talk show, Chick's Picks. He constantly boasts about his previous Piston Cup championship and cracks jokes at McQueen's expense as Jackson Storm takes over the sport. Pixar writer Bob Peterson voices Chick in this film as Keaton was filming Spider-Man: Homecoming.
Chick returns in the Cars video game, where he is caught spying on Lightning's practice sessions. He ineffectively taunts Lightning before the first race of the season until Doc warns him off, then falls in with a gang of New York-based greaser cars in Carburetor County to challenge McQueen. The DRH gang jumps Mack on the interstate to steal McQueen's racing gear, but finger Chick as the one who hired them when caught by the Sheriff. In the Cars Race-O-Rama video game, he seeks revenge by attempting to close down McQueen's racing academy to start his own in Radiator Springs, although he gets defeated at the end. His catchphrase is "Ka-Chick-Ah!", a blatant rip-off of McQueen's catchphrase "KA-CHOW!".
Despite the fact he did not appear in Cars 2, he does show up in the film's video game as a downloadable character for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 editions. He also appears in Disney Infinity.
In the Rioplatense Spanish version of Cars, Hicks is voiced by Marcos di Palma, a racecar driver also known for his brash attitude.
Besides him, there is a similar character named Ripslinger in the 2013 Cars spin-off movie Planes and its 2014 sequel, produced by DisneyToon Studios.
Jackson Storm
Jackson Storm, a blue-and-black 2017 custom built "next generation" Piston Cup racer, is one of the newer rookies that comes into the racing sport, and the main racing rival of Lighting McQueen in the third installment in the franchise. He is an arrogant, overconfident rookie. He constantly insults McQueen about retiring. He set records and won many races.
At the Florida 500, he is overtaken by McQueen's former trainer Cruz Ramirez. He attempts to make her lose focus by telling her that she doesn't belong on a track. Cruz, however, regains her confidence and drives up next to Storm, who tries to slam her into a wall. Cruz flips over him and lands, in exactly the same fashion as Doc Hudson.
Jackson Storm is voiced by Armie Hammer.[8]
Radiator Springs populace
These characters live in Radiator Springs with Lightning Mcqueen, his trainer Cruz Ramirez and their hauler, Mack .
Mater
Sir Tow Mater is a rusty tow truck and McQueen's eventual best friend, voiced by comedian Larry the Cable Guy. His design was inspired by a 1951 International Harvester boom truck. He's the main character in Cars 2 and a supporting character in the other films.
Sally
Sally Carrera is the town's attorney and McQueen's love interest. She is voiced by Bonnie Hunt, and modeled after a 2002 Porsche 911.
Doc
Doc Hudson is the town's medical doctor and a local judge, voiced actor Paul Newman in the first film and its video game and Corey Burton in all other related media. He is modeled after a 1951 Hudson Hornet. He did not appear in the second film, as it is implied that Doc died.
He won three consecutive Piston Cups in 1951, 1952, and 1953, with Smokey as his crew chief, corresponding to the first three of the real-life Hornet's production years.
Sheriff
The Sheriff (voiced by Route 66 historian and author Michael Wallis) is a 1949 Mercury Eight Police Cruiser police car, bearing Carburetor County license plate 001. Sheriff is painted in the classic law enforcement black and white with a single red light dome, two sirens, and curb feelers. Sheriff was the first resident of Radiator Springs to appear in the original film and the first to meet Lightning McQueen during a police chase when McQueen was speeding through the town, attempting to locate Mack. Upon catching McQueen, who had become ensnared in wires and fencing, Sheriff paraphrases a line used by actor Joe Higgins, who played a sheriff in early 1970s Dodge commercials, as "Boy, you're in a heap of trouble."[9]
Sheriff was known to distrust McQueen; at one point when Sally gives McQueen some gasoline, Sheriff notices McQueen smiling at the road as if he is planning to escape. In reply Sheriff with a glare turns on his gumball in case. Lightning chooses to accompany Sally, rather than making an escape attempt, resulting in Sheriff switching off his emergency lighting. This marks the beginning of trust in Lightning by Sheriff. He later befriends Lightning McQueen, offering him a police escort to California and even giving a few sniffles when he thought Lightning had left after finishing fixing the road (though he denied it, claiming he was glad Lightning was gone), and joins his pit crew for the championship race.
Sheriff reappears in Cars 2, seeing Lightning and his race crew off to the World Grand Prix. When Mater goes missing, Ramone mentions that Sheriff has Scotland Yard scouring London for Mater. During the climax of the film, Sheriff arrives with the other Radiator Springs residents as new members of McQueen's pit crew in England, and is informed by Mater of the Lemons cars' plot to kill McQueen in order to turn all vehicles in the world against alternate energy and rely on gasoline for profit. Sheriff then has Red the Firetruck squirt water on the Lemon cars during the final battle, arrests most of the defeated ones with help from Sarge. Then the next day Sheriff cheers Mater on when he is knighted for foiling the evil plot led by surprisingly, the race and Allinol inventor Sir Miles Axlerod. Sheriff also engages in the final melee against the Lemon cars.
Luigi
Luigi (voiced by Tony Shalhoub) is a 1959 Fiat 500. He is a Scuderia Ferrari fan, and has followed racing his entire life. His license plate reads 445-108, which is the latitude and longitude for the main Ferrari factory in Maranello, Italy.[10] Luigi owns a tire shop, Casa Della Tires, which is known for its "Leaning Tower of Tires," a tower of several tires shaped like the Leaning Tower of Pisa. His assistant is an Italian forklift truck named Guido.
Inside his shop are many framed pictures of World Sportscar Championship endurance racing Ferraris from various points in history. At first, Luigi and Guido do not respect Lightning McQueen when he comes to Radiator Springs (owing to the substantial havoc that he inflicted upon the town when he first arrived), because he is not a Ferrari ("Luigi follow only the Ferraris"), but later on they learn to show courtesy to McQueen, fitting him with whitewall tires, since Luigi is a fan of white tires (having a pair himself). During the final race, Luigi and Guido work as part of Lightning's pit crew, and Guido sets the Piston Cup record in changing tires, taking only 4 seconds to change all the tires, sending the other pit crew into shock. After the race, a group of Italian sports cars – a Ferrari F430 (voiced by Michael Schumacher) and two Maserati Quattroportes – arrive at his shop, explaining that "Lightning McQueen told me this was the best place in the world to get tires" and requesting "three or four sets each". The presence of a celebrity Ferrari in their store causes both Luigi and Guido to faint from shock and happiness.
For the Italian version of the film, Luigi was voiced by comedian Marco Della Noce; one of Della Noce's most popular characters was "Oriano Ferrari", a parody character meant to represent the leader of Ferrari's pit stop crew.[11]
In Cars 2, Luigi is a part of Lightning's pit crew, in charge of the racer's tires. In Japan, he is naturally overjoyed to see so many Ferraris at a party prior to the first race of the World Grand Prix. He also hesitantly begins to explain to Mater what a rendezvous is, but he and Guido do not believe Mater when he believes he has a date ("Guido don't believe you!" "Guido still don't believe you!") Luigi and Guido are overjoyed to be back in their home of Italy, and rejoin their large group of family and friends. A little more is discussed of Luigi's past with Guido: Luigi's Uncle Topolino mentions that Luigi and Guido often fought when they worked for him (over things like which Ferrari was the best, and which one of them looked more like a Ferrari, etc.) but they always made up after their fights. Luigi joins his friends in a mêlée against Professor Zündapp's Lemons at the film's climax, and finally believes Mater's claims of a girlfriend when Holley Shiftwell confirms the fact in person at Radiator Springs.
He is seen driving at the end of Finding Nemo.
Guido
Guido (voiced by Guido Quaroni) is an early 1950s Isetta forklift, who works at Luigi's Casa Della Tires, and is Luigi's best friend. The only language Guido can speak and understand fluently is Italian, though he appears to understand English, and even speaks a few phrases, including "Pit stop" but pronounced "Peet stop!" His dream is to perform a pit stop for a real racecar. Near the end of the movie, as a member of Lightning's new pit crew, he performs the fastest pit stop in Piston Cup history, speed-changing all four tires in only 4 seconds, shocking Chick Hicks' pit crew who had earlier made fun of him, and causing their moustaches/grills to fall off in the process.
In order to preserve the "language barrier" gags between Guido and the other characters in the Italian dub, his lines (and the other cars' lines in Italian) have been rendered with the Emiliano-Romagnolo accent spoken in the town of Modena, Italy, home of the Ferrari car manufacturer and racing team. Alex Zanardi, an Italian race driver who is a native of Bologna, the largest city in the Emilia-Romagna region (and thus presumably familiar with that dialect), voiced Guido for the Italian version. Coincidentally, or as a pun by the authors, the name "Guido" is a perfect homonym for the Italian inflected verb meaning "I drive".
In Cars 2, Guido serves the same purpose he served in the first film's climax in Lightning's pit crew throughout the film. He also removed all tires from some of the Lemons when the malicious cars surrounded Lightning and Mater, but is unable to remove the bomb from Mater's nose (engine). Guido dryly does not believe Mater when he says he has a date ("Non ci credo"), but has a jaw-dropping moment when he sees that Mater was telling the truth about his new girlfriend Holley Shiftwell (Guido believe you now! - Luigi).
Ramone
Ramone (voiced by Cheech Marin) is a 1959 Chevrolet Impala Lowrider that owns the Ramone's House of Body Art store, where he paints himself and other cars, including Lightning McQueen later in the film. His garage employs the distinctive architecture of the Tower Station (U-Drop Inn) in Shamrock, Texas. His license plate reads "L0WNSL0", which is a reference to his catchphrase, "Low and slow." He is married to Flo, whose restaurant is next door to his store. Ramone is usually depicted as purple with a yellow and orange flame job, but throughout the film, he changes his paint job every morning (green, yellow, red in the first film, blue in Mater and the Ghostlight) to keep his skills sharp, owing to a lack of customers. This situation changes after Radiator Springs becomes vibrant again. He also likes to drive slow and very low on the road, and is overjoyed when the road is asphalted, enjoying the smoothness of the road.
In a deleted scene that told the story of how Ramone and Flo fell in love, the only customer Ramone has refused to paint was his future wife Flo. When she asked him, "Whassamatta, you too good to paint me?" he promptly and smoothly replies, "No baby, you too good for me to paint," and saying that he could not touch a classic like Flo, which made her heart melt. The story took place in Radiator Springs in 1974. This part was shown in the info on Ramone in Cars Mater-National Championship.
Ramone reappears in Cars 2, making a few appearances in the Radiator Springs scenes, though he joins everyone else to help McQueen in England. In the melee scene, Ramone disables one of the lemon cars by spray painting into the car's eyes, blinding him.
In the movie Planes, when Dusty cuts off the radios power when El Chupacabra was singing the song "Love Machine", he says Ramones catchphrase "Low and slow" which causes Chupacabra to sing a romance version of the song.
Flo
Flo (based on Fran Hauser of Adrian's Midpoint Café and voiced by Jenifer Lewis) is the owner of Radiator Springs only gas diner, "Flo's V-8 Café", and is married to Ramone, the town's body artist. Her license plate reads "SHOGRL", the same as the license plates applied to many Motorama show cars and an abbreviation of the term "showgirl". During the cruising scene, "Motorama 1957" appears above her license plate. According to a deleted scene, she is a Motorama showcar who came to Radiator Springs during a national tour (although there wasn't a Motorama show held in 1957). Ramone custom painted her crew all except her. She asks "What's the matter, you too good to paint me?" Ramone said "No baby, you're too good for me to paint." They immediately fell in love. She appears to be inspired by two early- to mid-1950s show cars: the 1951 Buick XP-300 (side trim), and the 1956/57 Chrysler Dart (cockpit, deck lid, and tailfins).[12]
Flo reappears in Cars 2 to help Lightning and Mater battle the Lemons (who were sent to kill Lightning by Miles Axlerod). Later, she and Sally are seen swooning over Francesco.
In Toy Story 2, Al's car looks a lot like her; she may be a reference to his car.
Fillmore
Fillmore (based on Route 66 artist Bob Waldmire[13] — not acknowledged in the film's credits — and voiced by George Carlin in Cars, Cars: The Video Game, Mater and the Ghostlight, and Cars Toons (via archives), Brian George in Cars Mater-National Championship, Mark Silverman in Cars Race-O-Rama and Lloyd Sherr in Cars 2 and Cars 2: The Video Game) is a Volkswagen Type 2 microbus of late 1950s/early 1960s vintage as evidenced by his pointed front turn signals and small rear window. Fillmore's license plate reads "51237", an easter egg which is a reference to May 12, 1937, the birthdate of George Carlin, and is also the ZIP code of George, Iowa.[14]
He is a stereotypical hippie, as he has stickers of the peace sign and flowers with his license plate positioned to resemble a soul patch. His name is a reference to the Fillmore East, a venue that was an epicenter for rock performances throughout the 1960s and 1970s (The Allman Brothers, The Grateful Dead, and Jimi Hendrix all made notable live recordings there, to name a few). He owns an organic fuel shop (Fillmore's Organic Fuel) which features several flavors, and believes gasoline companies are lying to the public. He is implied to smoke marijuana,[15] as it is indirectly referenced when he speaks of his organic fuel use.[16] In the morning, when next-door neighbor Sarge plays Reveille and raises the Flag of the United States, Fillmore interrupts Sarge's bugle reveille with Jimi Hendrix's rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner". This is much to Sarge's irritation, as he yells at Fillmore:
- Sarge: "Will you turn that disrespectful junk off?!"
- Fillmore: "Respect the classics, man! It's Hendrix!"
Despite this, he is friends with Sarge, and the two can be seen chatting throughout the film.
He has a sticker on his rear that says "I brake for Jackalopes". The jackalope is a mythical creature which features in the theatrical short Boundin', shown with The Incredibles. Another sticker says "Save 2D Animation". He has appeared in every Disney Cars game so far. As voiced by George Carlin, Fillmore's voice is similar to "Al Sleet, the hippy-dippy weatherman", a part of Carlin's comedy routine in the 1970s.
Fillmore reappears in Cars 2, joining McQueen's pit crew for the World Grand Prix. He has a smaller role compared to the previous film. He is the only original character that had to be re-cast (due to George Carlin's death), and was replaced by Lloyd Sherr (with a professional hippie voice) in this film. Fillmore initially supports Allinol as it supposedly does not use oil, even convincing McQueen it is safe after several accidents involving other cars using Allinol. However, for the final race, Sarge replaces McQueen's Allinol with Fillmore's organic fuel, which is what prevents Lightning from being killed in the race.
Fillmore was originally going to be named Waldmire, after a Route 66 resident, but Waldmire, a vegan, didn't want his name to be used, because Fillmore toys would be featured in Happy Meals at McDonald's.
Sarge
Sarge (voiced by Paul Dooley) is a 1941 Willys Jeep. A veteran with a military green paint job and a slightly stylized Sergeant Major (E-9) insignia on his sides, he appears to be a World War II era Willys MB. His license plate reads "41WW2", which indicates the date the Willys MB entered the service of the U.S. Army (1941 World War II). He runs a surplus store, named "Sarge's Surplus Hut", next door to Fillmore and acts as part of Lightning's pit crew, gassing him up during the race. Near the end of the film, he operates a boot camp to train SUVs and 4x4s (some of whom had never been off-road) in rugged and dirt terrain. His recruits include T.J. Hummer, Murphy, Frank "Pinky" Pinkerton, and Charlie Cargo.
Sarge reappears in Cars 2, using assistance from the British Army to aid in the melee against the Lemons. Prior to the final leg of the World Grand Prix, he secretly switches McQueen's supply of Allinol (the alternative fuel developed by race founder Sir Miles Axlerod) for Fillmore's organic fuel blend. Like Fillmore he became suspicious of the fuel after the incidents in Japan and Italy. The change saves McQueen from being destroyed as part of Axlerod's plot to discredit alternative fuels.
Lizzie
Lizzie (voiced by Katherine Helmond), a 1923 Ford Model T Coupe, is the widow of Radiator Springs' founder, Stanley, and the elderly owner of a roadside souvenir and accessory shop (Radiator Springs Curios, which uses the "HERE IT IS" slogan and signage of the Jack Rabbit Trading Post on US 66). Her license plate, "MT23", is a reference to her model and year. Her name is derived from Tin Lizzie, one of the Model T's popular nicknames. She appears to have gone somewhat senile, and has a crush on Lightning McQueen. When she is shown teasing Luigi and Guido in the film, stating that "the new road makes your place look like a dump." Luigi angrily says that she is a crazy, devilish old woman but despairs at the truth of her words and sets to work repainting the Casa della Tires garage to its original appearance. She appears extremely motherly.
Lizzie reappears in Cars 2 with a minor role. In the beginning she greets Lightning when he returns, but didn't even know he was gone all this time. She isn't present at the airport but is seen in the end talking to Mack about how crazy Holley Shiftwell is for keeping a dent.
She appears in the Cars Toons: Mater's Tall Tales episode "Time Travel Mater", where her and Stanley's backstories are revealed.
Lizzie was originally going to be named Henry F. Ord, after Henry Ford. She also, at one point, originally resembled a Ford Model T "Center Door" Sedan.
Red
Red (voiced by Joe Ranft and later Jerome Ranft) is a closed-cab pumper bearing Carburetor County license plate "002." He is shy and emotional which explains why he cries and drives away at the same time. He spends most of his time gardening and washing things, such as the statue of Stanley in front of his fire station. It was stated by Mater that Red "hated" Lightning McQueen, because he accidentally killed his flowers. Later, it is clear that Red had forgiven Lightning McQueen and warmed up to him, especially when he burst into tears and fled when he mistakenly thought that Lightning McQueen left without saying goodbye. In the movie, Red never spoke (not counting his sobs and gasps). Joe Ranft died in a car accident in August 2005, 11 months before the movie was released.
Red reappears in Cars 2 as a non-speaking character. He only makes a small appearance at the airport crying as he sees Team McQueen taking off for Tokyo, also in the battle against the Lemons, where he arrives just in time to blast some of the Lemons away with his fire hose.
Red appears in the Tales from Radiator Springs short film: Bugged. He is voiced by Jerome Ranft, who voiced Gamma in Up.
Stanley
Stanley (voiced by John Michael Higgins) is Lizzie's late husband who was the founder of Radiator Springs. Stanley was probably based on and named after a Stanley Steamer, a steam-powered automobile. Lizzie, reminiscing, describes him as having been "an awfully persistent li'l bugger for a two-cylinder". A statue of Stanley stands outside the town hall, and although it was broken off its pedestal and dragged through the streets on a wire by Lightning McQueen, it was fortunately undamaged, and another mishap placed the statue right back where it was. Although dead, Stanley continues to exert an influence on the town, particularly over Lizzie, who often talks to his statue in memory of him.
Stanley's statue reappears in Cars 2 where he was shown to be less old and broken, possibly renovated.
In the Cars Toon, Time Travel Mater, Stanley appears alive for the first time. In the Cars Land theme park, signage commemorating "The Original Radiator Spring" claims that "On this site in the summer of 1909 Stanley, exploring out west, overheated as his radiator water boiled away. Coasting into the shade, he happened upon a life-saving natural spring. Upon this most fortunate discovery, Stanley founded the first settlement in Ornament Valley, and in honor of the oasis, christened it Radiator Springs."[17] Stanley's Oasis is listed as the first local business in Radiator Springs, although condensers only appeared on Stanley steam cars beginning in 1915.
Stanley makes a silent cameo in the Pixar short, Boundin'.
Bessie
Bessie is a tarmac laying machine that is used to fix roads in Radiator Springs. She was often used by one of the citizens of Radiator Springs, referenced as "Big Al", before the citizen in question left fifteen years ago. When Lightning McQueen accidentally destroys the road with the statue of Stanley, Radiator Springs traffic court judge Doc Hudson sentences him to fix the road with her.
While Doc insists "this here is Bessie, finest road-paving machine ever built", a construction trade publication's August 2006 editorial describes her as a "tar-spewing hybrid paver/compactor" and "an ecological disaster" as sometimes Bessie boils over and splats tar onto the car(s) pulling her.
"If she doesn’t hit you with a stray spray of hot asphalt burbling in two tanks heated by open flames, the fumes emanating from every orifice would prompt an asthma attack. Aggregate jostles loose in a top hopper, and her black-smoke-extruding exhaust pipes are coated with the remains of decades of paving seasons... In fact, everything is wrong about Bessie except the product she produces when Lightning finally decides to get serious about his civic duty."— Equipment World[18]
During the epilogue, the Delinquent Road Hazards have to fix a road with her as punishment for speeding. Bessie is a "non-living" vehicle; she cannot move by herself and she has no voice actor in the film.
Frank and the tractors
Frank is a generic red combine harvester that resembles a bull, and the guardian of the tractors (which "moo" as cows). After Lightning McQueen's first encounter with Frank during a night of tractor tipping with Mater, Lightning starts dreaming that he, The King, and Chick Hicks (the last of whom does not survive, getting chopped up while The King and McQueen move out of the way) are beaten by Frank in the tie-breaker race. When he wins, big smoke comes out of his horns which makes him look more like a moose while Lightning is surrounded by the tractors who are licking him. He is last seen with the tractors at the drive-in theatre scenes behind the fence far behind Mack, watching the movie as well. He is also seen in the short Mater and the Ghostlight when Mater races past him, waking him up, but does not chase him. Frank seems to be the soothing and kind master of the tractors and the leader of the herd and also hates trespassers who step into his farm and bother the tractors. The tractors also appear in Planes and are shown to be sacred in India.
Former residents
A flashback in the original film devotes a little over a minute to show Radiator Springs in a pre-freeway era when all cross-country traffic would by necessity pass through the town's busy main street. Various old cars appear very briefly in this segment with no names and no dialogue, only to vanish when the town is bypassed.
Miles "Meattruck" Malone was a red-cab delivery truck serving the Ornament Valley region; Dustin Mellows, a yellow delivery truck, bore the logo and initials TS for Trophy Sparkplugs. Local cars included Mildred Bylane (a light-brown car leaving Luigi's), Percy Hanbrakes (a brown car towed to Flo's by Mater), Edwin Kranks (a two-tone apple-green car), Hank "Halloween" Murphy (a two-tone orange "Rumbler" with tail fins, named as a parody of the Nash/AMC Rambler) and Milton Calypeer (a blue car on Route 66 at the town limits).
Bugs
In Radiator Springs and the surrounding desert area of Carburetor County, insects are depicted as small, winged VW Bugs (or beetles). The bugs appear at least three times in the original film, hovering around fluorescent lighting at Flo's V8 Café on Lightning's initial arrival, swarming around the windows and the one missing fuel pump at the Wheel Well Motel before its historic restoration, and in the desert where Minny and Van are still quite clearly lost at the end of the film, after the closing credits. (One bumps on the camera lens, leaving a mark on it, and flies off eventually) One also appears in Mater and the Ghostlight, which Mater had confused for the Ghostlight (despite the yellow headlights). The bugs are alive but do not speak (Vroomaroundus Bugus merely buzz with sped-up sounds of an air-cooled VW engine[19]) so they are not named individually and they have no voice actors.
Piston Cup announcers
Bob Cutlass
Bob Cutlass is an announcer for the Piston Cup races and friend of Darrell Cartrip. He is voiced by Bob Costas, the NBC sportscaster and journalist and his name, like Darrell Cartrip's, is a play on that of his voice actor. The character's name is a reference to the Oldsmobile Cutlass. Cutlass is actually supposed to resemble a 1999 Oldsmobile Aurora, even though the Aurora was never offered in a 2-door model. He did not return for the video game nor Cars 2 nor the video game for Cars 2. However, he did return for Cars 3.[20]He did not return for Cars 3: Driven To Win.
Natalie Certain
Natalie Certain, a red, smarty-pants acting sports car, is an RSN statical analysis in Cars 3 who also is a friend to Chick Hicks. She returns for Cars 3: Driven To Win. She is voiced by Kerry Washington.
Racetrack personnel
Various officials and track employees are seen in the original film but not named in the movie's credits, often because they have no named voice actor or no speaking role. Names and descriptions are assigned to these cars and trucks in the "Cars" franchise to allow the characters to be sold as die-cast toys.
Racing officials
Dexter Hoover (a pickup truck atop the flagstand) waves the green flag to start the race, the checkered flag to finish the race and the yellow flag when Piston Cup officials call a caution. Charlie Checker is the official pace car at each race of the Piston Cup Series. Like the Checker taxi cab, he is bright yellow. Race Official Tom, a Piston Cup official, reviews videotape in the replay booth for the photo finish in the first race. Tow is a tow truck who removes injured contestants from the track, dragging a disabled but stubborn Chuck Armstrong away from the Dinoco 400 after a collision.
Security
Marlon "Clutches" McKay, security team leader at the Motor Speedway of the South, is a former armored troop carrier. Richard Clayton Kensington (a large Piston Cup security van voiced by John Cygan) chases paparazzi from the replay booth, yelling "Hey! No cameras! Get out of here!" Marco Axelbender, a Piston Cup security guard at the Los Angeles International Speedway, refuses to admit Fred to Pit Row without a garage pass.
Vendors
Brian (voiced by Bob Scott), a pickup truck briefly spotted selling souvenirs at the Motor Speedway of the South, shouts "Get your antenna balls here!" Todd, a Pizza Planet truck, is shown in Cars, Cars 2 and Cars 3. At the end of the first movie, he is seen at the last race. At the end of the second movie, he is seen in Radiator Springs.
Sideshows
The Alphanumeros are a group of cars in tight formation, driving at the beginning of the tiebreaker race in position to spell "PISTON CUP" with each letter formed from multiple, matching moving vehicles. Barney Stormin, a small propeller-driven skywriting biplane, writes "PISTON CUP" only to have it obliterated by Marco's formation of three twin-engine jet fighters.
The Lightyear Blimp (a parody of the Goodyear blimp voiced by Danny Mann), is named "Al Oft". His only line is "Oh yeah! Whoo!"
Media
Kori Turbowitz
Kori Turbowitz (voiced by DJ Sarah Clark of KLLC's San Francisco Bay Area weekday morning Sarah and Vinny Show[21]) is a 1997 Ford Puma. A news reporter who makes three appearances in Cars, Turbowitz is shown interviewing McQueen on-camera immediately before his original pit crew resigns en masse, is the first to report Lightning McQueen missing, and later obtains a tip from Doc Hudson revealing McQueen's location in Radiator Springs.
Chuki
Chuki is a small, light pink hatchback with a Japanese nationality, living in Tokyo. Chuki has a very small appearance in Cars-she is shown as one of the news reporters who appear in the multi-clip footage of various TV news channels reporting McQueen's sudden disappearance while being transported to the Los Angeles International Speedway for his tie-breaker final of the Piston Cup. In Cars Toons: Mater's Tall Tales episode "Tokyo Mater", Chuki is seen presenting a news broadcast on one of the large TVs installed in Tokyo. In Cars 2, she is seen in the neon advertisement glowboards in Tokyo.
Chuki is based on hatchbacks designed according to Japan's Kei car specifications and is voiced by Sonoko Konishi, a senior Pixar animator who was also part of the animation team that won Ratatouille (another Pixar film) an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.[22] Konishi is credited in the Cars 2 cast for voicing the Japanese toilet assistant that appears in the computerized automated car toilets in Tokyo.
Jay Limo
Jay Limo, like his voice actor Jay Leno, is the talk show host of The Jay Limo Show. He resembles the latest generation of the Lincoln Town Car. He remarks "I don't know what's going to be harder to find; Lightning McQueen or a crew chief who'll work with him!"
News anchors
Chuck Manifold (voiced by Teddy Newton), a blue and somewhat-boxy 1980s-style car, is an anchor for Racing Sports Network (RSN) who appears briefly at the end of the last of multiple media reports of McQueen's disappearance with the one line "They are all asking the same question: Where is McQueen?"
Dan Sclarkenberg (voiced by Bob Bergen), a green car and one of two "braking news" desk anchors on MPH 55 NEWS, is one of the announcers of the "McQueen Missing" segments.
News helicopters
A pair of helicopters with searchlights (as the first of a large group of reporters in Radiator Springs) are not listed in the film's credits but identified elsewhere in the franchise. The red Kathy Copter (voiced by Kathy Coates) only shouts "We have found McQueen!" twice while the white/yellow Ron Hover does not have a speaking part.
Camera and microphone cars
Other press cars (not identified in the film's credits) are Houser Boon (a yellow camera car voiced by Michael Bell exclaiming "Show us the bolt!"), Tim Rimmer (a grey tabloid news photo car booing Chick Hicks #86 when the Piston Cup is awarded), Hooman (a small brown camera car in Radiator Springs voiced by Hooman Khalili), Dash Boardman (a green camera car at the race), Andrea (a magenta-red reporter car voiced by Colette Whitaker holding a microphone) and Skip Ricter (a brown car who appears outside Los Angeles International Speedway as an announcer voiced by Craig Good; a play on former real-life NASCAR executive Les Richter).
Video coverage of the race itself is handled by Racing Sports Network personnel Artie (one of a pair of video control operators and a light-blue car who exclaims "Bob! Darrell! The Hudson Hornet's back!") and Nelson Blindspot (a light-green SUV, one of multiple Piston Cup video camera operators). Both names reference real-life staff who work with Waltrip on NASCAR on FOX broadcasts, Artie Kempner (director) and Nelson Crozier (spotter).
Shannon Spokes
She interviews racers after they win and not being afraid to ask questions. Inspired and voiced by Shannon Spake.
Race fans
Mia and Tia
Mia (voiced by Lindsey Collins) and Tia (voiced by Elissa Knight) are identical twin 1992 Mazda MX-5 ("Miata") sisters who are Lightning McQueen's self-proclaimed biggest fans in the first film. In Lightning McQueen's daydream about the Dinoco Sponsorship, the twins are Dinoco blue, except for the scene in the penthouse, where they are painted gold. After McQueen's disappearance, the twins are devastated that McQueen apparently will not make it to the race. Chick Hicks then swoops in and consoles them, loading them up with his own merchandise and a free Hostile Takeover Bank-sponsored green paint job. Mia and Tia accept the offer, not because they are Chick's fans, but because green complements their eyes. They soon return to being McQueen's fans, turning against Hicks after he deliberately causes Strip "The King" Weathers to wreck in the tie-breaker race.
Mia and Tia eventually move to Radiator Springs and are visible briefly as waitresses at Flo's V8 Café during the end credits. Their characters are based on sisters Mary Lou and Christina Mendez at the Midpoint Café in Adrian, Texas, where the café's (now semi-retired) owner Fran Houser is the basis for "Flo".[23]
In a deleted scene on the Cars DVD, the twins were fans who distract Lightning during a brief stop at the Top Down Truck Stop, a venue with "all convertible waitresses", causing Mack to inadvertently leave without him. The implicit reference to toplessness is largely removed from the final script, which has Mack driving straight through and separates the characters on I-40. Mia and Tia appear in every episode of Cars Toons: Mater's Tall Tales except Time Travel Mater and make a cameo appearance near the end of Cars 2 as spectators at the new Radiator Springs Grand Prix.
Albert Hinkey
Albert Hinkey (voiced by Douglas Keever[24][25]) is an RV who proclaims himself as Lightning's "biggest" fan ("biggest" being a pun because he is such a large vehicle). He is seen in the background of races. His topside is decorated with rows of Lightning/Rust-eze flags. Hinkey also has a loud horn, which he uses while saying "Ka-Chow!" (McQueen's catchphrase) and the loud noise is a nuisance to fellow spectators. The Character is an obvious reference to John Hinckley John Hinckley, the stalker and attempted assassin of President Ronald Reagan who attempted such crimes to profess his love for actress Jodi Foster as her biggest fan.
His friend Larry Camper, voiced by Larry Benton, exclaims "Dip me in axle grease and call me Slick! It's the Hudson Hornet!" when Lightning's Radiator Springs pit team arrives for the tiebreaker race. This is a joke on the old Harold Lloyd punch line, "step right up and call me speedy!," which originated (mostly) in his hit silent film called The Freshman Lloyd also made another film called Speedy, which may or may not have been a reference, as it was made three years after The Freshman.
Fred
Fred (voiced by Andrew Stanton) is a starstruck, very rusty old car resembling a Lada 2107. Everybody knows his name because his license plate holder and license plate read "Hello, my name is" and "FRED", respectively. He is the prop for the recurring gag in the film; when McQueen says his name, he shouts "He knows my name!" twice and, in his excitement, his front bumper (which happens to be his lower jaw) falls off. Later, when he is unable to gain access to the tie-breaker race and Mario Andretti (who would be waved through the gate on sight as a celebrity) likewise reads his license plate, Fred says, "Mario Andretti knows my name! You gotta let me in now!" He is seen in Radiator Springs at the end of the film with bumper stickers for the last three towns (Kingman, Barstow, San Bernardino) in Route 66 (song); when he stops, his front bumper falls off again. He also shows up in Mater National and Race-O-Rama.
Fred is one of the many rusty old cars at the Rust-Eze sponsor tent for McQueen's personal appearance; others (listed in the "Car Finder" game but not named in the movie's credits) include Jonathan Wrenchworths (the rusted green car in Rust-Eze advertisements) and Donna Pits (a rusted 1970s car standing beside Fred).
Additional fans
A group of five transport lorries watch the race at a truck stop; two are identified in the "Car Finder" game as Gil (a green Peterbilt) and Paul Valdez (an orange transport with a white stripe and 'PV' on his cap).
A group of RV's watching the tiebreaker at the speedway include Barry Diesel (a thirsty RV with a blue Dinoco visor cap, sipping two kegs of Dinoco Light), Bud (a white RV with a jackalope painted on his back), Clayton Gentlebreeze (a white RV with green stripes) and Syd VanDerKamper (a camper van).
The "more than two hundred thousand cars" watching the tiebreaker race include Coriander Widetrack (a small purple car holding a model aeroplane), Marty Brakeburst (a grey runabout wearing a Piston Cup antenna ball), Mathew "True Blue" McCrew (a blue car behind a fence with "the King" flag on his antenna), Milo (a boxy green car beside McCrew), Polly Puddlejumper (a small blue car with a blue "the King" crown on her antenna), Swift Alternetter (a green SUV surrounded by RV's), Timothy Twostroke (a dark-red car displaying the #95 lightning bolt on his visor and antenna) and Wilmar Flattz (a small light-purple car with "lightning" on his antenna and "95" on his visor).
Maddy Macgear
Lightning McQueen's biggest fan in Cars 3.
Other racecars
"Junior" #8
"Junior" #8 is a red stock car similar to the Gen 4 cars that the Sprint Cup Series used prior to 2007. As his name suggests, he is voiced by Dale Earnhardt, Jr., and closely resembles the #8 Budweiser Chevrolet that Earnhardt, Jr. drove from his Sprint Cup début in 1999 until his departure to Hendrick Motorsports in 2008. The car's Budweiser stickers are replaced by Dale Earnhardt Inc. stickers. These stickers refer to the same change made in NASCAR games as well as toys to avoid advertising beer. Junior is seen during the first race (Dinoco 400). When McQueen goes missing, Junior tells the Competition Racing Sports Network "I sure hope that Lightning is okay. I would hate to see anything bad happen to him!". At the tie-breaker, Junior wishes The King good luck in his last race, as "you've been an inspiration to me". Junior is last seen at the Radiator Springs racing museum with The King and his wife Lynda, amazed by Doc Hudson's many season winnings during the 1950s. Junior does not appear in the video game.
Mario Andretti #11
Mario Andretti voices his eponymous character, who is a former racecar that believes every day is a great day for racing. He is based on the 1967 Holman Moody Ford Fairlane that Andretti drove to victory lane in the 1967 Daytona 500. In the Spanish edition of the movie, Andretti is voiced by Spanish Formula One champion Fernando Alonso.
A small green car seen beside Andretti at the entrance to pit lane is identified in the "Car Finder" game as Patty, Mario's personal assistant. She does not have a speaking role in the film.
The actual Ford Fairlane that Andretti drove was rebuilt as a Mercury Cyclone by Robert Gee (Dale Earnhardt, Jr.'s maternal grandfather), driven in 1971 by German F1 and sportscar driver Rolf Stommelen for his only NASCAR start at Talladega Superspeedway, then sold to Darrell Waltrip for use his five races in 1972 and the first half of the 1973 season. It later became a Sportsman racer for Waltrip, but was crashed in 1975 at the Permatex 300 Sportsman race (now Xfinity Series race). Abandoned by Gee, it stayed there until a few NASCAR mechanics restored the car in its 1972 configuration as a 1971 Mercury Cyclone (brown #95) in the mid-1990s for a celebration of the 25th anniversary of Waltrip's first Cup start. It is displayed at Waltrip's museum in Harrisburg, North Carolina, and part of an Andretti exhibit at the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 2013. (A replica of the car as it looked in 1966 was also part of it.)[26]
Dinoco Light 350 contestants
The initial race in Cars 3 consists of 43 cars, like the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series starting field until 2016,[27] five of which proceed to the Los Angeles 500 in California (in Cars 3). (The Dinoco Light 350 at the Motor Speedway of the South") and most make only silent cameo appearances. As automobiles without speaking roles have no voice actors, these briefly visible characters are absent from the film's credits.
Dinoco 400 contestants
The initial race in Cars and Cars 3 consists of 43 cars, like the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series starting field until 2016,[28] three of which proceed to the tie-breaker race in California (in Cars 1) and five of which proceed to the Los Angeles 500 in California (in Cars 3). With the exception of Earnhardt, Jr.'s #8, plus The King, Chick Hicks, and Lightning McQueen, the remaining forty vehicles (and the corresponding teams' pit crews) appear only during the first race (the Dinoco 400 at the Motor Speedway of the South") and most make only silent cameo appearances. Many of these cars are towed as wreckage after a massive crash deliberately ignited by #86 Chick Hicks during the race (in the first film). Eleven of these racers (with Lightning McQueen included) return for the same event in Cars 3, but this time at the Copper Canyon Speedway.
As automobiles without speaking roles have no voice actors, these briefly visible characters are absent from the film's credits. Names and back stories were assigned to these vehicles (typically one crew chief and one of the forklift mechanics per race car) in the "Car Finder" game and the die-cast Cars toy line but these are/are not named characters in the first film and in the third film.
Car Number | Sponsor | Name | Description |
---|---|---|---|
#00 | Intersection Bringing Autos Together | Jimmy Cables | A red, pink, and white male Piston Cup stock car that eventually gets replaced by Ember Ross in Cars 3. |
#4 | Tow Cap Hitch Protectors: "For a Safe Ride" | Rusty Cornfuel | - Is involved in the multi-car crash. Retires sometime before Cars 3. |
#4 | Tow Cap Hitch Protectors: "For a Safe Ride" | Jack DePost | - Takes over Rusty Cornfuel's role in Cars 3 as Tow Cap racer, but with a golden 4 and only to be replaced by Lori Lumbers later on in the movie. |
#5 | SynerG Synthetic Natural Fuels | Lane Locke | - A new sponsor seen in Cars 3 only to be replaced by Donald Mingo later in the movie. |
#6 | Transberry Juice | Vincent Coolantine | Takes over Lee Revkins' role as Transberry Juice racer in Cars 3, but with a different number, only to be replaced by Bubba Wheelhouse later in the movie. He was racing with Ricky Axel, Eric Ismond, Ralph Carlow, Todd Marcus, Jackson Storm and others on the BnL Raceway (a reference to WALL-E, Up and Toy Story 3). |
#11 | Combustr The Power of Online Banking | Chip Gearings | One of the new sponsors in Cars 3. Company first sponsors a green, purple and white stock car, only to be replaced by Cuba Gading, Jr. later in the movie. |
#15 | Easy Idle | Sammy Strikebreaker | Takes over Ruby's role in Cars 3, but with a different number, only to get replaced by Ricky Axel later on in the movie. Like Ruby and unlike Ricky, he has blue and white colors and unlike Ruby and like Ricky he has the number 15. |
#19 | Octane Gain | Bobby Swift | A purple and orange race car, who took over Billy Oilchanger's position as the Octane Gain racer in Cars 3, only for Octane Gain to fire him, and replace him with Daniel Swervez before the last race of the 2016 Piston Cup season (at the Los Angeles International Speedway for the Los Angeles 500). He was voiced by Angel Oquendo. |
#21 | BlinkR Headlights | Speedy Comet | A new sponsor in Cars 3. Sponsors a teal and orange stock car only to be replaced by Ryan "Inside" Laney later in the movie. |
#24 | Vitoline | Brick Yardley | A green race car, taking over James Cleanair's position as the Vitoline racer almost ten years prior Cars 3, only for Vitoline to fire him, and replace him with Chase Racelott before the last race of the 2016 Piston Cup season (at the Los Angeles International Speedway for the Los Angeles 500). Name is a reference to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's nickname, "Brick Yard". He was voiced by Diedrich Bader. |
#28 | Nitroade Hi-Energy Drink | Aiken Axler | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Finishes the race near the front of the group. He is one of the racers that retires before Cars 3. |
#28 | Nitroade Hi-Energy Drink | Phil Tankson | Takes over Aiken Axler's role as the Nitroade racer in Cars 3, only to be replaced by Tim Treadless later in the movie. |
#31 | Triple Dent Spearmint Flavored Dent Filters | Terry Kargas | - A new sponsor seen in Cars 3. Sponsor is based on the gum brand in Inside Out, and is a stock car, only to be replaced by Cam Spinner later on in the movie. |
#33 | Mood Springs | Chuck Armstrong | A blue car who was sent airborne during the collision and then was seen begging, crying, and sobbing "Don't take me out, I can still race!" while he was taken away by a wrecker. Retires before Cars 3. He was voiced by Jess Harnell. |
#33 | Mood Springs | Dud Throttleman | Takes over Chuck's role as the Mood Springs racer in Cars 3 only to be replaced by Ed Truncan later in the movie. |
#34 | Trunk Fresh: Smell Ya Later | Dirkson D'Agostino | - Is involved in the multi-car crash. He has green and black colors, and he also is one of the racers that returns for Cars 3 with slight paint job modifications, only to get replaced by Kenneth "Crosswrenches" Crossbar before the Los Angeles 500. |
#35 | Shifty Drug | Kevin Racingtire | A racer who hits the #84 Re-Volting car during the multi-car collision. Retires sometime before Cars 3, and Shifty Drug goes out of business. It's one of 7 sponsors not to return for Cars 3. |
#36 | Tank Coat: Soothes Upset Tanks | Eugene Carbureski | He did not get involved in the multi-car crash until a car spins him into it off-screen. Retires sometime before Cars 3. |
#36 | Tank Coat: Soothes Upset Tanks | Reb Meeker | A Piston Cup stock car who takes over Eugene's role as the Tank Coat racer in Cars 3 with Eugene's number, only to be replaced by Richard "Rich" Mixon before the Florida 500. |
#39 | View Zeen Corrective Windshields | Ryan Shields | Is involved in the multi-car crash. A near-sighted vehicle without his View Zeen windscreen the race is merely a blur. Retires before Cars 3. |
#39 | View Zeen Corrective Windshields | Buck Bearingly | The new View Zeen racer who takes over Ryan Shields' role and shares the same number, only to be replaced by Brad Clearview before the Florida 500. |
#48 | Re-Volting | Timothy Gray "T.G." Castlenut | Takes over Davey Apex's role as the Re-Volting racer in Cars 3 (with a different car number), only to be replaced later in the movie by Rowley Wrecker. Short name is T.G. Castlenut. |
#51 | Easy Idle: A Warm Start to a Cold Morning | Ruby "Easy" Oaks | A blue car who was involved in the multi-car collision. Retires before Cars 3 to be replaced by Sammy Strikebreaker and Ricky Axel. |
#52 | Leak Less Adult Drip Pans | Claude Scruggs | A yellow car who was flipped onto the roof of the red #123 No Stall car during the multi-vehicle collision; McQueen jumps over him. His crew chief is Earl Filter and his forklift is Stacy. Retires before Cars 3. |
#52 | Leak Less Adult Drip Pans | Brian Spark | Takes over Claude's role as the Leak Less racer in Cars 3, but with the same number, only to be replaced by Phil Speedland before the Florida 500. |
#54 | Faux Wheel Drive | Johnny Blamer | He was involved in more collisions than any other car in Piston Cup history (giving him the "Magnet Face" nickname), and he hasn't finished any of his races in 10 years. He holds the Piston Cup record at 545 starts, but 0 finishes. Retires before Cars 3. |
#54 | Faux Wheel Drive | Tommy Highbanks | Takes over Johnny's place as the FWD racer only to be replaced by Herb Curbler later in the movie. |
#56 | Fiber Fuel | Brush Curber | Is involved in the multi-car crash. He has a huge family, including a wife and their 14 children, the other being the #121 Clutch Aid car. Retires before Cars 3, and Fiber Fuel goes out of business. It's one of 7 sponsors not to return for Cars 3. |
#58 | Octane Gain Turbo Vitamins | Billy Oilchanger | - A racer who was hit side-on by James Cleanair and Haul Inngas in the collision. One of his pit crew, a generic yellow forklift, is given the name "Dudley Spare" in the die-cast toy collection but has no name and no speaking part in the original film. He retires before Cars 3 to be replaced by Bobby Swift and Daniel Swervez.[29] |
#61 | Vitoline: For Older Active Cars | James Cleanair | - Is involved in the multi-car crash. Vitoline, a fuel additive vitamin company, provides fuel for older active cars. Cleanair takes these vitamins because he has been racing for over 20 years. Retires almost ten years before Cars 3 to be replaced by Brick Yardley and Chase Racelott. |
#63 | Transberry Juice | Lee Revkins | The first car hit by Chick Hicks (#86). Retires before Cars 3 to be replaced by Vincent Coolantine and Bubba Wheelhouse. |
#64 | RPM Nighttime Backfire Suppressant | Winford Bradford Rutherford | The third car hit by Chick Hicks, causing the multi-vehicle collision. McQueen is the second car hit deliberately by Hicks, but recovers control after a brief stop. His crew chief is "Chief RPM" and his forklift is Petrol Pulaski. Retires before Cars 3. |
#64 | RPM Nighttime Backfire Suppressant | Bruce Miller | Takes over Winford's role as the RPM racer in Cars 3. A teal, blue and yellow racer only to be replaced later in the movie by Hugh Boltstrike. |
#67 | Carbon Cyber: One Power Buster | Eric Ismond | A new sponsor in Cars 3 only to be replaced by Marco Boomer. |
#68 | N2O Cola | Manny Flywheel | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Sponsors N2O Cola that contains nitrous ingredients to give you that extra pep in your engine. Unfortunately, Manny himself cannot drink the product and still race legally. Retires before Cars 3. |
#68 | N2O Cola | Parker Brakeston | Takes over Manny Flywheel's role as the N2O Cola racer in Cars 3 only to be replaced by H.J. Hollis later on in the movie. His name was originally Harvey Rodcap, now the name of the Cars 3 Rev-N-Go #73 Racer. |
#70 | Gasprin Hood-Ache Relief | Floyd "Smoky Floyd" Mulvihill | Is involved in the multi-car crash. His nickname is "Smoky Floyd". Returns for Cars 3 with an upgraded body, "Hood-Ache Relief" removed from Gasprin's logo, and paint modifications only to be replaced by Buzz Spitball later in the movie. |
#73 | Carburetor Rev-N-Go Decongestant | Misti Motorkrass | Is involved in the multi-car crash. She is the only female racer out of all the 36 cars (in the first film) and has three brothers named Dave Motorkrass, Frank Motorkrass and Zach Motorkrass. Retires before Cars 3. |
#73 | Carburetor Rev-N-Go Decongestant | Harvey Rodcap | Takes over Misti's role as the Rev-N-Go racer in Cars 3, but is a male only to be replaced by Wilbur Gearshift. His name was the original name of the Cars 3 N2O Cola #68 Racer Parker Brakeston. |
#74 | Sidewall Shine | Slider Petrolski | Is involved in the multi-car crash. A yellow Capitol Motors/Verve XT which appears only in the first race. Retires before Cars 3, and Sidewall Shine goes out of business. It's one of 7 sponsors not to return for Cars 3. |
#76 | Vinyl Toupée: Vinyl Top In a Can | Crusty Rotor | Is involved in the multi-car crash. He is a Stodgey Suaver EX like Gasprin #70. Retires before Cars 3. |
#76 | Vinyl Toupée: Vinyl Top In a Can | Tyler Loudrev | Takes over Crusty's role as the Vinyl Toupée racer in Cars 3. He sports tan, white, and blue colors instead of purple, pink, green, and black colors. He is replaced by Zip Joltline later in the movie. |
#79 | Retread Roll On Tire Deodorant | Haul Inngas | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Inngas is said to be European. Retires before Cars 3, and Retread goes out of business. It's one of 7 sponsors not to return for Cars 3. |
#80 | Creme-Filled Gask-Its: The Racetrack Treat | Sage VanDerSpin | Is involved in the multi-car crash. His name is said to come from South Africa. Retires before Cars 3. |
#80 | Creme-Filled Gask-Its: The Racetrack Treat | Rex Revler | Takes over Sage's role as the Gask-Its racer at the start of Cars 3, only to be replaced by Downturner Chamberlain later in the movie. |
#82 | Shiny Wax | Darren Leadfoot | Is involved in the multi-car crash.His crew chief is Senior Trax and his forklift is Nebekenzer Schmidt. Returns in Cars 3 with slight paint job modifications, only to be replaced by Rudy Hydraul later in the movie. |
#84 | Apple, Inc. | Matthew "Mac iCar" Overtaker | A reference to Steve Jobs; his car number is year of introduction of the Apple Macintosh desktop computer line. Initially seen behind Dale Earnhardt Jr; The King overtakes him after the race restarts and he is the only car not to be involved in the multi-car collision. He finishes near the back of the pack. Returns for Cars 3 with a sleeker "84" design only to be replaced by Charlie Charger. |
#84 | Re-Volting Rebuilt Alternators | Davey Apex | Duplicate car number (as #84 is also the iCar); this car is hit during the multi-vehicle collision. Retires before Cars 3 to be replaced by Timothy Gray "T.G." Castlenut and Rowley Wrecker. |
#90 | Bumper $ave | Ponchy Wipeout | Is involved in the multi-car crash. His last name probably is a reference that he used to be a stunt double. Returns for Cars 3, with slight paint job modifications and black eyelids, only to be replaced by Paul Conrev later in the movie. |
#92 | Sputter Stop Cold Engine Relief | Murray Clutchburn | Is involved in the multi-car crash. He has teal and orange colors just like the Dolphins football team. Returns for Cars 3 with an upgraded body, only to be replaced by Buford Wilson later in the movie. |
#93 | Spare Mint | Ernie Gearson | Is involved in the multi-car crash. His crew chief is Ernest B. Raykes and his forklift is Piccolo Perry. Returns for Cars 3 with an upgraded body, only to be replaced by James Wisconsin later in the movie. |
#101 | Tach-O-Mint | Greg Candyman | - Is involved in the multi-car crash. The Tach-O-Mint branding on him is gingerbread brown with candy cane text. In Cars: The Video Game, another racer, Guenther takes his place and his number is 117. Retires before Cars 3, and Tach-O-Mint goes out of business. It's one of 7 sponsors not to return for Cars 3. |
#117 | Lil' Torquey Pistons | Ralph Carlow | Is involved in the multi-car crash. He is colored red, white, and blue. He also has an older brother named Jordon Carlow. Returns in Cars 3 with brighter blue areas only to be replaced by Brandon Martinez later in the movie. |
#121 | Clutch Aid | Kevin Shiftright | Is involved in the multi-car crash. He is one of the 2 cars to be the longest running race car in his family. His family is also huge, just like the #56 Fiber Fuel car. His father won 3 Piston Cups and his grandfather won 2. Returns for Cars 3 with an upgraded paint job (using aqua green, lavender, and white), only for Clutch Aid to fire him, and to be replaced by Matthew Hopper later in the movie, along with having a son named Kanton. |
#123 | No Stall | Todd "The Shockster" Marcus | A red race car who hits the yellow #52 Leak Less car during the multi-car collision; #52 lands onto his roof before McQueen must jump over the wreckage.His crew chief is Roman Dunes (a.k.a. Chief No Stall) and his forklift is Shirley Spinout. He also appears in the app "Cars: Fast as Lightning". Returns in Cars 3 with major paint job modifications, seen with a blue, green, white and red paint job instead of a red, black and white paint job, only to be replaced by Carly Wheelson later in the movie. He was voiced by Jerry Trainor in Cars: Fast as Lightning. |
Florida 500 contestants
As automobiles without speaking roles have no voice actors, these briefly visible characters are absent from the film's credits.
These are/are not named characters in its second sequel. Many of these cars are towed away as wreckage after a massive crash indirectly ignited by #31 Cam Spinner during the race (in the third film).
Car Number | Sponsor | Name | Description |
---|---|---|---|
#00 | Intersection Bringing Autos Together | Ember Ross | Not in the multi-car crash. A pink, hearted, and white rookie racer with an elevated spoiler who takes over Jimmy's place as the Intersection racer in Cars 3, but is a female. |
#4 | Tow Cap Hitch Protectors: "For a Safe Ride" | Lori Lumbers | Not in the multi-car crash. She takes over Jack's place as the Tow Cap racer in Cars 3 after the CEOs of Tow Cap Hitch Protectors fire him, but is a female. Unlike Rusty and Jack's paint schemes, this racer depicts Tow Cap with purple, light blue, and green colors. |
#5 | SynerG Synthetic Natural Fuels | Donald Mingo | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Lane's role as the SynerG racer. |
#6 | Transberry Juice | Bubba Wheelhouse | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Vincent's role as the Transberry Juice racer later in Cars 3, but with Vincent's number. He is voiced by Darrell Wallace Jr. |
#11 | Combustr: The Power of Online Banking | Cuba Gading, Jr. | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Chip's role as the Combustr racer in Cars 3. Like Chip, he sports purple, white, and green colors. |
#15 | Easy Idle | Ricky Axel | Is involved in the multi-car crash. A white, blue, and black next-gen racer that takes over Sammy's role as the Easy Idle racer later on in Cars 3. |
#19 | Octane Gain | Daniel Swervez | Not in the multi-car crash. He is a purple and orange race car who takes over McQueen's friend Bobby's role as the Octane Gain racer in Cars 3 (also shares the same 19 number based on Daniel Suarez's racing number). He is voiced by Joe Gibbs Racing Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series #19 driver Daniel Suarez. |
#21 | BlinkR Headlights | Ryan "Inside" Laney | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Speedy's role as the BlinkR racer. He is voiced by the real-life Wood Brothers driver Ryan Blaney. |
#24 | Vitoline | Chase Racelott | Is involved in the multi-car crash. A green and white next generation race car who takes over Brick's position as the Vitoline racer in Cars 3 (also shares the same 24 number based on Chase Elliott's racing number). He is voiced by Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott. |
#28 | Nitroade Hi-Energy Drink | Tim Treadless | The second car hit by Cam Spinner. Takes over Phil's role as the Nitroade racer in Cars 3. Sports a black and bronze paint job instead of a black and orange paint job. |
#31 | Triple Dent Spearmint Flavored Dent Filters | Cam Spinner | Causes the multi-car crash and leaves after he is hit by Ricky Axel. Takes over Terry Kargas' role as the Triple Dent racer in Cars 3. It is currently unknown who voiced him. |
#33 | Mood Springs | Ed Truncan | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Dud's role as the Mood Springs racer in Cars 3. |
#34 | Trunk Fresh: Smell Ya Later | Kenneth "Crosswrenches" Crossbar | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Dirkson's role as the Trunk Fresh racer later in Cars 3. Sports yellow, green, and brown colors instead of green and black colors. |
#36 | Tank Coat: Soothes Upset Tanks | Rich Mixon | Hits Charlie Charger and then he is involved in the multi-car crash. Name is similar former US president Richard Nixon. Takes over Reb's role as the Tank Coat racer in Cars 3. First car to become a tractor in Cruz's mind. It is currently unknown who voiced him. |
#39 | View Zeen Corrective Windshields | Brad Clearview | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Buck's role as the View Zeen racer later on in Cars 3. |
#48 | Re-Volting | Rowley Wrecker | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Timothy's role as the Re-Volting Rebuilt Alternators racer in Cars 3. |
#52 | Leak Less Adult Drip Pans | Phil Speedland | The first car hit by Cam Spinner. Takes over Brian's role as the Leak Less racer in Cars 3, and is a male just like Claude and Brian. Like Claude and Brian, he has black and yellow colors. |
#54 | Faux Wheel Drive Dirt Decals: Just Like Off-Road! | Herb Curbler | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Tommy's place as the FWD racer. Sports just green and yellow colors (the blue and brown colors got removed). |
#64 | RPM Nighttime Backfire Suppressant | Hugh Boltstrike | Not in the multi-car crash. A black, yellow, blue, and orange next-gen racer who takes over Bruce's role as the RPM racer in Cars 3, with the same number. |
#67 | Carbon Cyber: One Power Buster | Marco Boomer | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Eric's role as the Carbon Cyber racer. |
#68 | N2O Cola | Henry J. Hollis | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Parker Brakeston's role as the N2O Cola racer in Cars 3. Shorter name is H. J. Hollis. |
#70 | Gasprin Hood Ache Relief | Buzz Spitball | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Floyd's role as the Gasprin racer in Cars 3. Sports blue, light green, and purple colors instead of blue and yellow colors. |
#73 | Carburetor Rev-N-Go Decongestant | Wilbur Gearshift | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Harvey's role as the Rev-N-Go racer in Cars 3. |
#76 | Vinyl Toupée: Vinyl Top In a Can | Zip Joltline | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Tyler's role as the Vinyl Toupée racer later in Cars 3. |
#80 | Creme-Filled Gask-Its: The Racetrack Treat | Downturner Chamberlain | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Rex's role as the Creme-Filled Gask-Its racer. Unlike Sage and Rex, he has black, blue, yellow and purple colors. |
#82 | Shiny Wax | Rudy Hydraul | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Darren's role as the Shiny Wax racer later on in Cars 3, but with the same number. |
#84 | Apple, Inc. | Charlie Charger | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Matthew's role as the Apple Inc, racer later on in Cars 3, with Matthew's number. |
#90 | Bumper Save | Paul Conrev | Not in the multi-car crash. Takes over Ponchy's role as the Bumper $ave racer later on in Cars 3. Sports red, white, and cyan colors, just like Ponchy. |
#92 | Sputter Stop: Cold Engine Relief | Buford Wilson | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Murray's role as the Sputter Stop racer later on in Cars 3, but with the same number. |
#93 | Spare Mint | James Wisconsin | Not in the multi-car crash. The new Spare Mint Racer who takes over Ernie's role as the Spare Mint racer later on in Cars 3, but with the same number. |
#117 | Lil' Torquey Pistons | Brandon Martinez | Is involved in the multi-car crash. Takes over Ralph's role as the Lil' Torquey Pistons racer later on in Cars 3, with the same number. |
#121 | Clutch Aid | Matthew Hopper | Is involved in the multi-car crash. A purple, green, white, and blue racer who takes over Kevin's role as the Clutch Aid racer later on in Cars 3 and shares the same number. |
#123 | No Stall | Carly Wheelson | Not in the multi-car crash. A magenta and brown next-gen racer who takes over Todd "The Shockster" Marcus' role as the No Stall racer later on in Cars 3, but is a female. |
Thomasville contestants
These are/are not named characters.
Car number or numbers | Sponsor | Name | Description | When they raced |
---|---|---|---|---|
#01 | Smell Swell or Rust-eze | Sammy Smelter | One of the racers when #17 Darrel Cartrip was a racer. He is Lightning McQueen's predecessor. | ???? |
#8 | Kirby | Levi Mitchan | One of the racers when #51 Doc Hudson was a racer. | 1950s |
#12 | Fireball Beach Fire Department | Fireball Beach Fire Department racer | Another racer when Doc Hudson was a racer. | 1950s |
#17 | Southern Gold | Robinson | Another racer when Doc Hudson was a racer. | 1950s |
#82 | Lucky's Bar & Grill | Guzzler | Another racer when Doc Hudson was a racer. | 1950s |
#300 | Re-Volting Rebuilt Alternators | Jocks Flocko | Another racer when Doc Hudson was a racer. Retired brfore Cars to be replaced by Davey Apex | 1950s |
Michael Schumacher
Michael Schumacher is a 2004 Ferrari F430 sports car voiced by Schumacher himself. He is a Ferrari in reference to five of his seven Formula One championships which were achieved with Ferrari F1. He appears at Luigi's shop at the end of the movie after being told by Lightning McQueen that "this is the best place in the world to buy tires", and asks to order a few sets of tires for himself and a pair of Maserati Quattroportes who accompany him. After Luigi faints from the excitement of having "a real Michael Schumacher Ferrari in his store", Schumacher speaks to Guido in Italian, and Guido subsequently faints. The Italian phrase he speaks is, "I hope that your friend recovers, I was told that you are fantastic." Because of licensing issues, in the Cars toyline, his name is called Ferrari F430 instead of his name himself.
Darrell Cartrip
Darrell Cartrip, a 1977 Chevy Monte Carlo, is a Piston Cup announcer in the first and the third film. A former Piston Cup racer, his character is based on his voice actor, 1989 Daytona 500 winner and NASCAR on Fox commentator Darrell Waltrip. An enthusiastic Cartrip uses Waltrip's catchphrase "Boogity boogity boogity! Let's go racing, boys!" and insists that his oil pressure's running through the roof and he might need to be towed out of the booth after the race.
Cartrip appears in the Cars video game as the sole announcer; he is a playable character in the Piston Cup VS. and Arcade mode. He returns in the second film as the only of three World Grand Prix announcers to believe it was Lightning McQueen's race to lose.
A real-life 1977 Monte Carlo was driven by Waltrip with DiGard Motorsports, finishing a very close second-place finish (11 points behind Richard Petty) for the 1979 championship Cup.[30] Waltrip raced from midway through the 1975 season until the 1980 season driving for the team. The real-life car's original number (DiGard's #88) and green-and-white Gatorade livery do not appear on the character (the livery's design is now owned by PepsiCo). The film's credits list Darrell Waltrip Motorsports (his licensing arm) as the "#17 Car" (known for his Hendrick Motorsports and own efforts in winning three of NASCAR's four majors); Waltrip's various NASCAR entries have included a #17 (three times—two of those he owned, the other belonging to Hendrick Motorsports) and a #95 (the one he drove in his 1972 debut was at one time the real-life former Mario Andretti #11 from 1967 seen in the Cars franchise, is one such).
The most famous of the real-life 1977 DiGard Monte Carlos was the infamous "Bertha", displayed at the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in Talladega, known for a weight-reduction scheme (devised by Gary Nelson and Buddy Parrott) where up to 100 pounds (45 kg) of buckshot is dropped on-track on parade laps to lighten the car. A subsequent NASCAR rule change to weigh cars after the race now prevents this type of ruse, is the main announcer for the Piston Cup races, along with Bob Cutlass; announcer in Cars and now, Cars 3; he is voiced by Darrell Waltrip.
Other vehicles
Van and Minny
Van (voiced by Richard Kind) and Minny (voiced by Edie McClurg) are husband and wife. In the first film, they are lost and pass through Radiator Springs while trying to find their way back to Interstate 40. Van refuses to ask directions, claiming not to need them due to having a GPS. Minny mentions that Van did the same when they were heading up to the "Crazy Days" (a parody of Derby Days[31]) in Shakopee. U.S. Route 66, taken off the map in 1985, is conspicuously absent from stored maps in automotive aftermarket GPS units — an omission also noted by Harv, Lightning's agent, and a minor running joke in the film.
Both are equipped with car alarms, which they arm after their encounter with Lightning McQueen when he begs them to call for help (they dismissed his plea as madness). After the final credits, Van and Minny are shown dirty and lost somewhere in the desert, having never asked for directions, with Van almost driven to insanity. Their names combine as a pun on "minivan". Van is a 2003 Ford Windstar and Minny appears to be a 1996 Dodge Caravan. Minny speaks with a pronounced Minnesota accent.
Van and Minny reappear near the end of the second film. While Minny is mesmerized by Mater's spy story, Van does not believe one word of it until British agent Holley Shiftwell arrives to confirm it, which surprises Van, leaving him mesmerized by her and annoying Minny. In the final scene, when a rocket-propelled Mater rushes past Van, maps that Van was carrying are sent flying.
Delinquent Road Hazards
The Delinquent Road Hazards are a group of four modified tuner cars that intentionally cause trouble on the highway: Boost (Purple Neon/Carbon fibre covered 90's Japanese muscle car influenced heavily on the 1995 Toyota Supra and Mitsubishi GTO), DJ (Blue 2004 Scion xB), Wingo (Green and purple 1995 Mitsubishi Eclipse) and Snot Rod (Orange 1970 Plymouth Barracuda). They get their group name from what Sheriff called McQueen when he ordered Mater to tow him to traffic court. They catch Mack nodding off to sleep on the way to California and amuse themselves by nudging him onto the rumble strips along the shoulder. The resulting vibration causes Mack's trailer door to open and a sleeping McQueen to roll out of the trailer. When the chronically sniffly Snot Rod sneezes, Mack is startled awake, and accelerates away, leaving the still-sleeping McQueen behind near Radiator Springs. During the end credits, the Hazards are caught speeding on the outskirts of Radiator Springs by the Sheriff, who gives chase and places them in the impound lot. They are sentenced to messy roadwork towing Bessie.
In the Italian dub, three of the Hazards are voiced by F1 drivers: Giancarlo Fisichella (Boost), Emanuele Pirro (Wingo) and Jarno Trulli (DJ). Boost, DJ and Wingo make a cameo appearance at the start of Tokyo Mater, drifting along the main road of Radiator Springs and shouting insults at the residents before Sheriff gives chase to them. D.J. was voiced by his inspiration and actor, E.J. Holowicki. Wingo was voiced by Adrian Ochoa. Jonas Rivera voiced Boost. Snot Rod was voiced by Pixar actor Lou Romano.
TJ Hummer
TJ Hummer (voiced by Dan Scanlon) is a vain Hummer H1 that Sarge teaches in his boot camp during the end of the movie. Unlike the other SUVs in the boot camp, TJ refuses to go off road, fearing that he will get dirt on his rims, but Sarge forces him to do so. His name may be a play on the action character T.J. Hooker. The other three boot camp recruits (none of which have speaking parts) are Frank "Pinky" Pinkerton (a pink SUV), Murphy (an orange SUV) and Charlie Cargo.
Sven "The Governator"
Sven "The Governator" (voiced by Jess Harnell) is a Hummer. His only line is "Lightning McQueen must be found at all costs!" The name and vehicle is a parody of Arnold Schwarzenegger's then-current position as California governor, the first three Terminator films he starred on, and the fact that he was one of the first Hummer H1 owners.
Jerry Recycled Batteries
Jerry (voiced by Joe Ranft) is a 1979 Peterbilt 352 that Lightning McQueen mistook for Mack. He has the words "Recycled Batteries" on his side. His only line in the movie is a response to McQueen: "Mack?! I ain't no Mack! I'm a Peterbilt for dang sake! Turn on your lights, you moron!" The deleted scene on the DVD has the words "Jerry's Junk" and his only line is shortened saying: "Turn on your lights, you moron!"
Interstate 40 vehicles
Various cars and trucks in non-speaking roles are named in the "Car Finder" game but have only silent cameos in the film.
Bertha Butterswagon, a small green runabout, watches Mack admiring his own reflection in a metal tanker truck. Leroy Traffik, a minivan with a mattress on his roof and a temporary spare as his right-rear wheel, passes a tired Mack just before the truck stop. He is seen with new tires from Luigi's during the film's epilogue.
Ben Crankleshaft, Chet Boxkaar and Oliver Lightload are sleeping trucks at the Top Down Truck Stop.
Duff Wrecks is a grey pickup truck briefly seen one lane away from the Delinquent Road Hazard gang on I-40.
Cars 2
These are characters who have first or only appeared in the film Cars 2 (2011).
Secret agents and spies
Finn McMissile
Finn McMissile (voiced by Michael Caine) is a British secret agent who recruits Mater, whom he mistakes for a cleverly disguised American agent, to help in his mission. Caine depicted his character Finn based on his previous role Harry Palmer from The IPCRESS File and its sequels. He is also similar to James Bond, whom Michael Caine did not portray.
Originally, Finn was supposed to appear in the first Cars movie. In a sequence that never went beyond the storyboarding stage, Lightning and Sally visited a drive-in theater where a James Bond-type film about a superspy car named Finn McMissile was playing. This scene was deleted.[32] The design of Finn is inspired by several cars: the roofline and doors of the Volvo P1800 (possibly inspired by Roger Moore's ownership of one while filming The Saint TV espionage series in the early 1960s), the grill and fenders of the BMW 507, and some major elements of the iconic James Bond Aston Martin DB5 (including its sound, as clearly heard in the intro of GoldenEye); he also resembles a 1970s Volkswagen Karmann Ghia. The look of the car has been slightly modified; Finn has a different grill that looks like a suave mustache, but like Bond, he does have plenty of gadgets.[33] His small tailfins were inspired by a 1958 British sports car called the Peerless—one of the few British cars with fins.[34] Finn is fluent in many languages, most notably French and Italian. He is outfitted with a plethora of gadgets, including: two (front) bumperette grappling hooks, a right headlight spy camera, a left headlight missile launcher, side mirror digital read-outs, a deployable glass cutter, wheel hub magnetic explosives launcher; (side) side vent deployable machine guns, (rear) wheel hub deployable surveillance probes, rear bumperette grappling hooks, a rear turn signal oil dispenser, an undercarriage mounted quad harpoon gun, a hydrofoil for oversea travel, a roof-deployed holographic disguise emitter, and a submarine-mode for underwater escapes.[34] Finn made a cameo in Toy Story 3 on a poster in Andy's room. His license plate is 314 FMCM, which includes a reference to his initials. The number 314 indicates Caine's birthday, March 14, the same day as Billy Crystal, another actor for Pixar. His belief about the World Grand Prix turns out to be true, as it was all just a setup by Miles Axlerod to make alternate fuel seem dangerous and make cars run on his own fuel with no choice.
Finn McMissile appears in Kinect Rush: A Disney-Pixar Adventure. It was revealed that Finn was a spy who was on the biggest oil platform in the world before he met Mater. None of them knew that Mater was not a spy. He just answered the question correctly. He can dispense bombs from his wing nuts. Finn is also able to magnetize his wheels in order to climb up some vertical metal surfaces. Finn's other abilities include purposely spilling oil onto the road, using grappling hooks to swing between buildings and traverse great heights by using the hook cables as tightropes, and being able to 'breathe' underwater.
Two power discs of him were made for Disney Infinity.
Holley Shiftwell
Holley Shiftwell (voiced by Emily Mortimer) is a British spy-in-training who is Mater's love interest/girlfriend in the film.
Holley's name is a reference to Holley Performance Products, Inc., a manufacturer of high-performance carburetors and fuel systems located in Bowling Green, Kentucky. Her design was made from a Jaguar XJR-15. Her name is possibly also a reference to Bond Girl Holly Goodhead. Her license plate is HS1201, which includes her initials. The number 1201 is Emily Mortimer's birthday in American date order (December 1).
Holley is equipped with gadgets including: (front) projection lamps above headlights that emit a heads-up display, headlight cameras; a (side) right wheel concealed gun and an electro-shock device, a telescoping utility arm, (undercarriage) mounted dual trackball platforms for controlling the heads-up display, and retractable wings for flight.[34]
Holley Shiftwell appears in Kinect Rush: A Disney-Pixar Adventure. She is a playable character in the Disney Infinity series.
Siddeley
Siddeley (voiced by Jason Isaacs) is a state-of-the-art British twin-engine spy jet. He is 176 feet long with a 157-foot wingspan (53 and 48 meters respectively) and is shown to possess afterburners, though no aspect of his airframe is suited to supersonic flight, In addition, he has VTOL (vertical-takeoff and landing) capabilities. His tail has A113 painted on it, a recurring gag in the Pixar films. Siddeley is also seen in the background in one scene of the Cars spinoff, 'Planes.' [35] His name is a reference to the British aerospace company Hawker Siddeley.
Stephenson
Stephenson is a spy train, who first appeared in Cars 2 working with Finn McMissile. Stephenson brings Finn, Holley, and Mater to Porta Corsa, Italy. Stephenson is a state-of-the-art bullet train, who scrambles switchboards, hops international rail lines, and can make it from Dover to Porto Corsa in five hours. He has no dining car and no spare compartment because he's filled with the finest in high-tech, classified spy gear and probably has a few secret agents aboard. One of his carriages contains high-tech equipment that modifies and adds gadgets to cars. His only line in Cars 2 is "Finn, one hour to Porta Corsa". Stephenson is named after the "father of railways", namely George Stephenson.
Leland Turbo
Leland Turbo (voiced by Jason Isaacs) was a British agent who appeared in the film's beginning. He sends a video message to Finn McMissile about what he sees in Professor Zündapp's oil rig. However, by the time Finn arrives at the rig, the lemons have found Leland and crushed him into a cube. He appears to be based on a Jaguar E-Type. His name is most likely based on Leyland Motors, a now defunct British vehicle manufacturer.
Rod "Torque" Redline
Rod "Torque" Redline (voiced by Bruce Campbell) was considered by many as America's greatest spy. He is the agent McMissile and Shiftwell were supposed to meet before he ran into Mater, which leads to the mistake of the spy cars thinking Mater is Redline.
In the beginning of the film, he is seen by McMissile (disguised as a lemon) talking to Professor Zündapp about the camera. In the bathroom, Rod takes off his disguise so Finn and Holley can recognize him. Unfortunately, lemons Grem and Acer come into the bathroom and his plan fails when they recognize him before Holley can meet him. Cornered by the villains, he turns his information over to a rusty American tow truck named Mater when no one noticed before being captured. He is later filled with Allinol at the lemons' hideout being tortured and killed by Professor Zündapp's weapon, a magnetic pulse gun disguised as a TV camera (Allinol explodes when it reacts with a magnetic pulse). But the lemons realized that he passed the info to Mater before killing him.
Torque is a visual portmanteau of a Dodge Challenger. His license plate is a Michigan plate (Campbell's home state) and reads "M1911A1", a reference to the handgun used historically by the United States Armed Forces.
Tomber
Tomber (voiced by Michel Michelis) is Finn McMissile's underground informant. Having been saved from a long sentence in a Moroccan impound lot (20 years to life) by McMissile, Tomber has since become an auto-parts dealer. He specializes in rare parts, such as the ones needed to keep a certain Rover V8 going. Mater and Tomber get along from their first meeting, both respecting the other's knowledge of cars and specific parts. Tomber (French for "to tumble") is a Reliant Regal threewheeler, a car notorious for its poor handling and tendency to roll over in even gentle turns. His license plate reads "PCS NO1R". He may be based on Del Boy from Only Fools & Horses
Sir Miles Axlerod and his minions
Sir Miles Axlerod
Sir Miles Axlerod (voiced by Eddie Izzard) is a former oil baron who has sold off his fortune after he supposedly converted himself into an electric vehicle. He was the first car to circumnavigate the globe without any GPS which is similar to explorer, Ferdinand Magellan who circulated the globe. Axlerod created the World Grand Prix to promote his new wonder-fuel, Allinol. Axlerod later reveals that he owns the largest untapped oil reserves in the world. His "alternative fuel" is actually ordinary gasoline engineered to ignite if hit with electromagnetic pulses from weapons disguised as television cameras. Axlerod's plans to use oil for world domination are eventually exposed. Axlerod plans to use Professor Zündapp and the Lemon Cars to kill McQueen in the final race, but the EMP weapon fails to finish him off because Sarge switched McQueen's Allinol for Filmore's organic fuel. As a backup, Axlerod has Zündapp and the lemon cars implant a bomb on Mater's air filter which was not seen in the climax. Mater confronts Axlerod about the conspiracy and forces him to deactivate the bomb with a voice command, proving that he was the one who set it. Axlerod's engine turns out to be the Rover V8 in the photo obtained by McMissile and Shiftwell after Mater opened his front hood (described by Mater and Tomber as "the worst engine ever made"), and he is exposed as a fraud and a liar and is arrested by the British police, wondering how Mater figured out Axlerod was behind the whole scheme.
Axlerod is styled after a first generation Range Rover and has a Rover V8 engine (an abandoned Buick design). Mater remarks after seeing the engine on the spy picture that the owner must be very happy since he has all the spare parts. Those spare parts are labelled "British Weyland", which is a parody on British Leyland, with a "W" instead of an "L" in the logo. British Leyland produced both the Rover V-8 engine and the Range Rover models. His last name, a portmanteau of "axle" and "rod", is a reference to Izzard's stand-up routine about the invention of the wheel and axle.
Professor Zündapp
Professor Zündapp (voiced by Thomas Kretschmann), often referred to as "Professor Z" (by his henchmen), is an internationally wanted weapons designer who is modelled after a Zündapp Janus 250 with a broken roof rack that evokes the look of a comb over. Though at first Professor Zündapp appears to be the main villain, he is eventually exposed as a subordinate to Miles Axlerod. According to Lego.com, it is revealed that his full name is Wolfgang Otto Zundapp. Zündapp also appears in Kinect Rush: A Disney-Pixar Adventure.
Professor Zündapp is first seen on the oil rigs near the beginning of the film having a meeting with all the lemons until he and all the lemons notice Finn McMissile and after all the other lemons think Finn is dead they tell him and he is happy about it. Later in Japan he is noticed by Finn McMissile when Holley tells him that an American Agent (Rod Torque Redline) has a device to pass to Finn. After Redline is taken to the Lemons lair by Grem and Acer, Zündapp arrives on an elevator and tells Redline about the Electromagnetic Pulse Camera and then kills him with it. The next day during the Japan race his voice is heard telling Grem and Acer to start hurting the racers with their weapon. Later in Italy he enters a meeting to discuss with the other lemons and after a huge car accident Sir Miles Axlerod decides to not require the race cars to use Allinol for the final race. When Lightning McQueen chooses to continue using the fuel he says McQueen needs to be killed. He and the other lemons soon captures Mater, Finn, and Holley. In London he tries to denotate the bomb and tries to escape on Tony Trihull but Finn is able to catch him using his grabbing hooks. Soon he is captured by Finn he is last seen being Zapped by Holley.
Grem and Acer
Grem (voiced by Joe Mantegna) is a dented, rusty orange AMC Gremlin. Acer (voiced by Peter Jacobson) is a beat-up green AMC Pacer. Both of these "lemon" cars are henchmen for Professor Zündapp, Grem and Acer mistake Mater for an American agent with top-secret information, chasing him around the globe. Even though they don't have all the spy weapons and gadgets they are still tough and will do anything and everything to stop secret agents.
They are first seen on the oil rigs near the beginning of the film when Finn McMissile is noticed by all the lemons and chase Finn until they think he is dead when 4 tires appear on the sea. In Japan when Rod "Torque" Redline enters the bathroom and takes off his lemon disguise to meet Finn McMissile and Holley Shiftwell, they slowly enter the restroom from behind Redline as seen through the mirror and damage him heavily. During the first race they use Professor Zundapp's weapon and recognize Mater and think he is a spy and go after him with all the other lemons and Finn McMissile has a battle against all of the lemons to keep Mater safe. At the airport they chase Finn McMissile and Mater who escape on Siddley safely. Later in Italy they are using their weapon on the race cars. When Finn McMissile and Holley Shiftwell spots them using the Electromagnetic Pulse Camera Finn rushes to stop them before more racers crash. As Finn gets to the top of the tower they are using the weapon on, he gets captured by a magnet hanging from a helicopter and they continue to sabotage more race cars until there is a multi-car pile up on the track. When Mater, Finn and Holley are tied up inside Big Bentley in London they use their weapon on Lightning McQueen he does not crash because Sarge replaced Allinol with Fillmore's organic fuel. After Mater, Finn and Holley escape they are going to kill McQueen when Flying Holley forces them to drive into a pub called Ye Left Turn Inn, where they have crashes into the bar into a table causing the patrons' drinks to spill all over. Confronted by the patrons, they are last seen being beaten up by the patrons as the tire of one of them was seen flying out. It's unknown what happened to them afterwards.
Tony Trihull
Tony Trihull (voiced by Lloyd Sherr) is a combat ship (modelled after USS Independence (LCS-2)) who works for Professor Zündapp. He first appears in the beginning when he notices Crabby and Finn in the oil reserve, ordering Crabby to leave. When Crabby refuses, Tony threatens him with a missile battery (based on the RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile). As a result, Crabby leaves but Finn hitches a ride on the back of Tony without him knowing. He later appears again near the end of the film in London when Professor Z tries to escape from being caught by Finn McMissile, yelling for the Professor to hurry and get aboard him. When Finn McMissile stops the Professor, Tony uses a magnetic device pulling the Professor to him. McMissile uses several mini-bombs out of his wheels on Tony, killing him.
Trihull has heavy metal teeth (evidently inspired by the legendary James Bond villain Jaws). His overall design recalls the sharks from the Jaws movies.
Hugo Family
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo (voiced by Stanley Townsend) is the head lemon of the Hugo family, being referred to as "the boss" by fellow Hugos. He and his Hugos work with Professor Zündapp. During the film, Victor uses Ivan, a blue tow truck (which Mater masquerades as to infiltrate the lemons' meeting), as his own personal transportation that tows him place to place instead of having to drive on his own. He attends the meeting with the other main heads of the three lemon families (Gremlin, Pacer, Trunkov) in Porto Corsa with Professor Z to discuss their evil plans about discrediting the Allinol by using the radiation disguised camera to crash out the racers in the World Grand Prix that use the gas, and ensure that all cars keep using conventional fuel to secure the profits of their "lemon" organization who managed to secure the largest unexplored oil resources in the world. Near the end of the film, Victor is arrested in London with his fellow lemons.
Victor is modelled after the Yugo car, with some adjustments: the logo V on his front bumper and two separate headlights on each side. He appears to be named after the historical writer Victor Hugo.
Alexander Hugo
Alexander Hugo (voiced by Velibor Topic) is part of the Hugo family that works for Professor Z and Miles Axlerod. He is the only black Hugo in the entire movie to talk, making him and Victor the only Hugo family members that talk. Despite his young age, he does dirty work (like Victor and Ivan) and attends the lemon meeting. He also is one of the lemons attempting to round up Mater so that the bomb would explode, killing both Mater and Lightning. Near the end of the film, Alexander is arrested in London with his fellow lemons.
Ivan
Ivan (voiced by Stanley Townsend) is a blue tow truck who serves as Victor Hugo's mode of transportation, towing him around. He resembles Mater greatly, in fact, Mater disguises as Ivan in order to infiltrate a lemon crime meeting. The real Ivan was previously tazed by Holley. He later awoke and captured Holley and even intercepted Mater before he can warn Lightning McQueen about the truth of Allinol. In the end, he is defeated by Mater and arrested alongside the other lemons. His name is pronounced ee-van instead of eye-van.
Pacer family
Tubbs Pacer
Tubbs Pacer (voiced by Brad Lewis) is the head lemon of the Pacer family. He and his Pacers work with Professor Zündapp. During the film, Tubbs and the other main heads of the three lemon families (Gremlin, Trunkov, Hugo) attend a meeting with Professor Z in Porto Corsa to discuss their evil plans about discrediting the Allinol by using the radiation disguised camera to crash out the racers in the World Grand Prix that use the gas, and ensure that all cars keep using conventional fuel to secure the profits of their "lemon" organization who managed to secure the largest unexplored oil resources in the world. Tubbs is seen smiling at the idea and cannot wait. Tubbs last name, "Pacer" is the model of his car. During the final fight in London, Tubbs tries to fight against McQueen to kill him, only to be stopped by Mater, who then uses his tow cable to swing Tubbs on the other side of the intersection, where Ramone violently throws in his spray paint on Tubbs. Without hesitation, Pacer and some of the lemons are forced to retreat only to be halted and arrested by the British Army (thanks to a tipoff from Sarge).
Petey Pacer
Petey Pacer is a blue AMC Pacer member of the lemon organization. He can be recognized as one of the cars equipped with flamethrowers who attack Finn McMissile on the oil rigs' helipad.
Fred Pacer
Fred Pacer is a light yellow AMC Pacer.
Trunkov family
Vladimir Trunkov
Vladimir Trunkov (voiced by Stanley Townsend) is the head lemon of the Trunkov family. He and his Trunkovs work with Professor Zündapp. During the film, Vladimir and the other main heads of the three lemon families (Gremlin, Pacer, Hugo) attend a meeting with Professor Z in Porto Corsa to discuss their evil plans about discrediting the Allinol by using the radiation-disguised camera to crash out the racers in the World Grand Prix that use the gas, and ensure that all cars keep using conventional fuel to secure the profits of their "lemon" organization who managed to secure the largest unexplored oil resources in the world. Vladimir is seen smiling at the idea. Near the end of the film, Vladimir and the lemons surround Mater, McQueen, and the British agents in an intersection, confirming them of the lemons' intent to kill McQueen, saying that it's nothing personal. He is eventually arrested by Sheriff in London when he placed a parking boot on him.
Vladimir is modeled after a ZAZ-968M Zaporozhets car, but with one adjustment—the T logo on his front bumper, which stands for his last name.
Tolga Trunkov
Tolga is a black Trunkov that helps Vladimir Trunkov by protecting him, but it does not know who he is in the movie because there are several otherblack Trunkovs.
Petrov Trunkov
Petrov Trunkov is a light green Trunkov who is not actually seen in the movie.
Gremlin family
J. Curby Gremlin
J. Curby Gremlin (voiced by John Mainieri) is the head lemon of the Gremlin family. He originates from Detroit, as he states it when he introduces himself to the other lemons. He and his Gremlins work with Professor Zündapp. J. Curby, along with the other main heads of the three lemon families (Pacer, Trunkov, Hugo), attend a meeting with Professor Z in Porto Corsa to discuss their evil plans about discrediting the Allinol by using the radiation disguised camera to crash out the racers in the World Grand Prix that use the gas, and ensure that all cars keep using conventional fuel to secure the profits of their "lemon" organization who managed to secure the largest unexplored oil resources in the world. J. Curby is seen smiling at the idea. Near the end of the film, J. Curby is sprayed by Red from behind, being thrown in the air. He is arrested in London with fellow lemons. J. Curby's last name is the make of his model.
Tyler Gremlin
Tyler Gremlin is a red/dark red AMC Gremlin.
Jeff Gorvette
Jeff Gorvette, a 2011 Corvette C6.R, is a now retired racer; he appeared in Cars 2 at the World Grand Prix; is Lightning McQueen's good friend; now an announcer for the Piston Cup races in Cars 3; he is voiced by Jeff Gordon.
Other cars
Daisu Tsashimi
Daisu Tsashimi, played by Daisuke "Dice" Tsutsumi, is the name of the forklift sushi chef who serves Mater wasabi, when Mater mistook it for delicious pistachio ice cream. Tsashimi is a play on sashimi, and his given name could be a play on the Japanese auto marque Daihatsu.
Mama Topolino
Mama Topolino (voiced by Vanessa Redgrave) is Luigi's aunt. She resembles a 1950s Renault (or maybe Alfa Romeo) Dauphine.
Uncle Topolino
Uncle Topolino (voiced by Franco Nero) is Luigi's uncle. He is a Fiat 500 "Topolino" from 1948 or earlier ("Topolino", which translates as "Little Mouse", is Mickey Mouse's Italian name). The cover on his top resembles a hair style, similar to Luigi's.
Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth II (voiced by Vanessa Redgrave) is a classic Rolls Royce Phantom car watching the race from Buckingham Palace. She knights Mater for his bravery in foiling Axlerod's plot. Her roof racks are made to look like a crown.
Prince Wheeliam
Prince Wheeliam, the grandson of the Queen of the United Kingdom, is based on Prince William, Duke of Cambridge. He is a Bentley Continental GT and a fan of Britain's Lewis Hamilton and Nigel Gearsley.
Signora Bernoulli
Signora Bernoulli is Francesco's mother. She is seen at the Porto Corsa race cheering her son on. She is an 1960s era Ferrari 312 Formula One race car and, as evidenced by her number, his biggest fan other than himself.
Mel Dorado
Mel Dorado (voiced by Patrick Walker (actor)|Patrick Walker) Is the host of the "Mel Dorado Show" where he interviews Miles Axlerod and Francesco Bernoulli. Mater calls the show and eventually gets McQueen into the World Grand Prix. As his name indicates he is a Cadillac Eldorado. As evidenced by his glasses and smile, he is loosely based on Larry King.
The Popemobile
The Popemobile is only seen at the Italian World Grand Prix Race – he is seen inside a bulletproof "popemobile" for his personal protection. He is among the many fans in the stands. The Popemobile is referred to earlier in the film when Mater asks, "Is the Popemobile Catholic?" He has no lines in the film. Black-hatted priests can be seen next to the Popemobile while he sits in the stands at Porta Corsa for the second race in the World Grand Prix. Small Isetta forklifts, similar the Guido character, are seen in white cassocks and red hats waving incense into the air.
World Grand Prix announcers
Brent Mustangburger
Brent Mustangburger, a 1965 Ford Mustang in traditional racing blue, is based on ESPN/ABC sportscaster Brent Musburger, who provides the character's voice.[36] He re-appears in the spin-off film Planes.
David Hobbscap
David Hobbscap, a British racing green 1963 Jaguar Coombs Lightweight E-Type, is a former champion from 24 Heures du Mans turned television sportscaster.[37] His character is based on the real life former British racing driver and current NBC Sports commentator David Hobbs, who provides the character's voice. Jacques Villeneuve voices the character in the French and Quebec versions of Cars 2. He joins Mustangburger and Darrell Cartrip.
Crabby the Boat
F/V Northwestern docked at the Trident shore plant in Akutan, Alaska |
Crabby the Boat (voiced by Sig Hansen) is a fishing vessel that is based on the F/V Northwestern, a boat captained by Hansen and featured in the American reality TV series Deadliest Catch. Crabby is painted and designed like the Northwestern. He is seen in the beginning of the film with Finn McMissile aboard him. Finn has paid Crabby to bring him to a certain location in the ocean so he can look for a car, a request that greatly puzzles Crabby. Once they reach the spot, Tony Trihull (see below) intercepts Crabby and threatens him with a missile launcher, forcing him to turn back. Crabby apologizes to Finn as he heads home, not knowing that Finn has already slipped off board and hitched onto Tony to continue his mission.
Cars 3
These are characters who have first or only appeared in the film Cars 3 (2017).
Smokey
Smokey, an older Hudson orange pickup truck, is Doc Hudson's old mechanic and crew chief who also helps McQueen, with his other participates (old timers River Scott, Louise Nash and Junior Moon) at the abandoned Thomasville Speedway. He explains to McQueen that while Doc was devastated by no longer racing, he found greater happiness in training him.
At the Florida 500, Smokey acts as McQueen's crew chief. He helps McQueen coach Cruz when she enters and race. Smokey is then seen at Willy's Butte for an exhibition race between McQueen and Cruz.
He is voiced by Chris Cooper. The character is based off on legendary NASCAR Mechanic Smokey Yunick
Mike Joyride
Mike Joyride is a Citroën 2CV, voiced by current Fox NASCAR announcer Mike Joy. He announces the unconfirmed status of McQueen's racing career after his crash and assumes the end of his racing days.
Miss Fritter
Miss Fritter is a demolition derby-inspired monster school bus, an undefeated Crazy-8 champion in the movie. She appears at a demolition derby at Thunder Hollow Speedway. She nearly saws Cruz with her Stop sign saw blades until Lightning McQueen, disguised as Chester Whipplefilter stops her only to get his spoiler stuck in her blades. Cruz Ramirez ends up winning the race.
Miss Fritter is then seen cheering for McQueen and Cruz, watching the Florida 500 on TV.
She is voiced by Lea Delaria.
Planes
- Dane Cook as Dusty Crophopper.[38][39] He was inspired by the Air Tractor AT-502, Cessna and the PZL-Mielec M-18 Dromader.[40]
- Stacy Keach as Skipper Riley, a Chance Vought F4U Corsair and Dusty's mentor. It was rumored that he shot down 50 planes and threatens Dusty to be no. 51.[41]
- Danny Mann as Sparky, a forklift
- Priyanka Chopra as Ishani, a Pan-Asian champion from India,[42] based on the AeroCad AeroCanard[43]
- Brad Garrett as Chug, a fuel truck[41]
- Teri Hatcher as Dottie, a forklift[41]
- Cedric the Entertainer as Leadbottom, a biplane[41] inspired by the Boeing-Stearman Model 75[43] with a partial engine cowl.
- Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Rochelle, a racing plane[41] inspired by the Bay Super V, a conversion of the V-tail Model 35 Beechcraft Bonanza.[43] Originally from Quebec,[41] her flag and paint job is localized in 11 countries.[44] In Australian and New Zealand, Rochelle is re-contextualized as a former Tasmanian mail delivery plane, and is voiced by Jessica Marais.[45]
- Roger Craig Smith as Ripslinger, a custom-built carbon-fiber plane, Dusty's rival in the film.[41][46]
- Gabriel Iglesias as Ned and Zed, Ripslinger's henchmen[41] inspired by the Zivko Edge 540 and MX Aircraft MXS.[43]
- John Cleese as Bulldog, a de Havilland DH.88 Comet[47]
- Carlos Alazraqui as El Chupacabra, a Gee Bee Model R[40][48]
- Val Kilmer as Bravo, a Boeing F/A-18E Super Hornet[41]
- Anthony Edwards as Echo, a Boeing F/A-18E Super Hornet[41]
- Colin Cowherd as Colin Cowling, a blimp.[41] In the UK, the blimp character is named Lofty Crofty and is voiced by Sky Sports F1 commentator David Croft.[49]
- Sinbad as Roper, a forklift[41]
- Oliver Kalkofe as Franz aka Von Fliegenhosen, a German Aerocar[47]
- Brent Musburger as Brent Mustangburger, a 1964½ Ford Mustang[47]
- John Ratzenberger as Harland, a jet tug[40][50]
- Barney Harwood as Sky Cam 1, a red helicopter filming the race over Germany
Planes: Fire & Rescue
- Julie Bowen as Lil' Dipper, a Super Scooper[51] based on the Grumman G-21 Goose and CL-415 SuperScooper[52]
- Curtis Armstrong as Maru, a forklift mechanic at the Piston Peak Air Attack base[53][54]
- Ed Harris as Blade Ranger, a veteran fire-and-rescue helicopter. He used to play a police helicopter in CHoPs with Nick "Loop'n" Lopez but became a firefighter when Nick died.[54] inspired by the AgustaWestland AW109, AgustaWestland AW139[55] and Bell 429 GlobalRanger[52]
- Wes Studi as Windlifter, a Sikorsky S-64 Skycrane heavy-lift helicopter[52][54][55]
- Dale Dye as Cabbie, a Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar retired from military service[54][55]
- Regina King as Dynamite, the leader of The Smokejumpers, a team of ground vehicles which parachute into fire sites[54]
- Corri English as Pinecone, a smokejumper equipped with a rake tool to clear brush and debris[54]
- Bryan Callen as Avalanche, a bulldozer and a smokejumper[54]
- Danny Pardo as Blackout, a smokejumper equipped with a circular saw[54]
- Matt L. Jones as Drip, a smokejumper equipped with a skid-steer claw to clear fallen trees and brush[54]
- Fred Willard as Secretary of the Interior, a green four-wheel-drive with a roof rack[54]
- Jerry Stiller as Harvey, an RV and Winnie's husband.[54]
- Anne Meara as Winnie, an RV and Harvey's wife.[54]
- Erik Estrada as Nick "Loop'n" Lopez, a helicopter police officer who was the co-star of CHoPs who was killed before Blade became a firefighter[54]
- John Michael Higgins as Cad Spinner, a luxury sport utility vehicle[54]
- Barry Corbin as Ol' Jammer, a tour bus[54]
- Hal Holbrook as Mayday, an old fire and rescue truck from Propwash Junction[54]
- Kevin Michael Richardson as Ryker, a transportation management safety truck with a roof-mounted watercannon for firefighting[54]
- Patrick Warburton as Pulaski, a structural firefighting fire truck with a roof-mounted watercannon for firefighting.[54] Pulaski's namesake,[52] Ed Pulaski, was known for his heroism in saving most of his crew during the Great Fire of 1910 by sheltering in an abandoned mine.
- Brad Paisley as Bubba, a Pickup truck,[56] who appears also in Italian comics, as a Mater's rival
- Kari Wahlgren as Patch[57]
- René Auberjonois as Concierge[57]
- Steve Schirripa as Steve[57]
- John Ratzenberger as Brodi[57]
Removed characters
Cars (2006)
Chad
"Chad" was a retired steamroller which was scrapped from the storyline around 2002. In the original story, Lightning McQueen is invited to race in the first ever Radiator Springs Grand Prix. He refused, choosing instead standard community service. When he wakes up the next morning, his V8 alcohol motor was taken out of his body and stolen by Mater and put inside of Chad. Lightning's voice was inside of Chad's steamroller body and he fixed the road. Mater, meanwhile borrows McQueen's body and goes to the next Piston Cup race. However, Lightning wakes up again, finding himself in his regular body, revealing that the everything was just a dream. He sees the steamroller body on the side, though. Still freaked out, he decided to change his mind and do the race instead.
Mr. Windshield
Mr. Windshield was a character which was scrapped from the storyline around 2003. Based on concept art, he was going to be a yellow Packard Clipper, although a 2000 concept sketch by Dave Deal shows him as a Packard Super Eight rather than a Clipper. As his name implies, he was going to be an optometrist/windshield salesman, and while the character was scrapped, his shop still made it into the final film. The design was reused for Ramone's House of Body Art.
Cars 2 (2011)
Zil
Zil was originally going to be the main antagonist in Cars 2, but was ultimately dropped in favour of Professor Z and Miles Axlerod. His design was based on the 1958 ZIL-111, but with one adjustment: the ZIL logo is on his front bumper.
Giulia
Giulia was an original character in the beginnings of Cars 2. She was intended to be the double agent that met up with Mater. Giulia was left out of the completed movie, and replaced by Holley Shiftwell. She is modelled as an Alfa Romeo, resembling an Alfa Romeo Giulia Spider.
References
- ↑ "Hours-of-Service Regulations - Effective October 1, 2005". US DOT Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. Archived from the original on 2005-09-07. Retrieved 2012-07-07.
- ↑ Tim Lammers (June 8, 2006). "Memories Of Dad Drive Ratzenberger's Mack In 'Cars': Actor Voices Seventh Consecutive Pixar Film". Archived from the original on July 10, 2012.
- ↑ Joanna Poncavage (April 22, 2006). "Mack among the stars". Morning Call. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
- ↑ "CARS Road Trip '06" promotional tour dates from Disney press release.
- ↑ Sam Whiting (June 29, 2012). "Dodge Dart owners still love the oldies". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ↑ "Now 75, Richard Petty remains ‘The King’ 20 years after his last victory". Palm Beach Post. July 4, 2012. Archived from the original on November 19, 2012.
- 1 2 Ann Job (May 7, 2006). "New movie rekindles love affair with cars". The Star-Ledger. Archived from the original on June 15, 2006.
- ↑ Alexander, Bryan (May 30, 2016). "Sneak peek: 'Cars 3' zooms ahead with new character Cruz Ramirez". USA Today. Retrieved July 23, 2016.
- ↑ Joe Higgins (as a sheriff), 1970 Dodge Challenger advertisement, uses the line "you're in a lot of trouble, boy".
- ↑ "Google Maps". Google.com. Retrieved February 19, 2017.
- ↑ Marco Della Noce's page on New Trends Management's site.
- ↑ "Concept Cars – Timeline 1938 – 1981". Archived from the original on August 30, 2004. Retrieved October 3, 2014.
- ↑ David Bakke (May 31, 2006). "Bob Waldmire: 'An ethical vegetarian'". State Journal-Register. Archived from the original on July 10, 2012. Retrieved May 12, 2012.
- ↑ "ZIP Code 51237".
- ↑ "12 Pixar Characters That Were Most Definitely High - KINDLAND". TheKindland.com. Retrieved February 19, 2017.
- ↑ "Stoner References In Kids Movies - Stoner Blog". StonerDays.com. 17 January 2014. Retrieved February 19, 2017.
- ↑ Adrienne Vincent-Phoenix (June 2012). "Cars Land Test Drive: Radiator Springs Racers". USA Today.
- ↑ Marcia Gruver (August 6, 2006). "On Record: The matter of Bessie" (editorial). Equipment World.
- ↑ Damon Bell. ""Cars" Gets it Right". Consumer Guide. Archived from the original on 2007-05-13.
- ↑ 'Cars 3' Drops New Poster, Announces Voice Cast
- ↑ "Sarah Clark". IMDb.com. Retrieved February 19, 2017.
- ↑ Rizvi, Samad. (May 31, 2011). "Pixar Employee Sonoko Konishi Provides Cars 2 Voice". Pixar Times.
- ↑ Eric Carpenter (June 13, 2012). "Life changed at her café when Pixar dropped in: Fran Houser said her Route 66 Midpoint Café in Texas was a sleepy spot – until the "Cars" movie premièred.". Orange County Register.
- ↑ Douglas Keever
- ↑ Daly, Steve (June 16, 2006). "The Man Who Inspired Mater". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
- ↑ "Darrell Waltrip's Car Collection". Stock Car Racing Magazine. June 2010. Archived from the original on 2007-11-13.
- ↑ Diaz, George (February 9, 2016). "NASCAR charter system will cut Cup field from 43 to 40 cars". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
- ↑ Diaz, George (February 9, 2016). "NASCAR charter system will cut Cup field from 43 to 40 cars". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
- ↑ "Individual character descriptions from "Cars Finder" game and die-cast toy line". Cars Drive In Gallery. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
- ↑ Mike Hembree (January 16, 2012). "Darrell Waltrip's Long Ride Ends In Hall". Speed TV. Archived from the original on January 19, 2012.
- ↑ "First Full Weekend in August". Shakopee Derby Days. Retrieved May 29, 2010.
- ↑ Rebecca Keegan (January 16, 2011). "2011 Movie Preview: 'Cars 2'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
- ↑ "Disney/Pixar Getting Back in the Fast Lane With Cars 2". Yahoo Movies. Archived from the original on 19 November 2010. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
- 1 2 3 "‘Cars 2′ Introduces Nearly 1,000 New Characters and More Fun Facts". Stitch Kingdom. Archived from the original on 26 April 2011. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
- ↑ Han, Angie (February 24, 2011). "Meet Two New ‘Cars 2′ Characters: Rod "Torque" Redline and Siddeley". /Film. Retrieved February 27, 2011.
- ↑ "Brent Musburger's 'Cars 2' character revealed". ESPN.
- ↑ "David Hobbscap | Cars 2". Disney. Archived from the original on April 30, 2011. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
- ↑ Strecker, Erin. "Dane Cook to voice lead in Disney's 'Planes'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
- ↑ "Dane Cook Leads the Voice Cast for Disney's Planes". ComingSoon.net. February 28, 2013. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
- 1 2 3 "Disney's "Planes" Hi-res Stills, Fun Facts and Activity Sheets". Stitch Kingdom. May 9, 2013. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Alexander, Bryan (March 25, 2013). "Look! Up in the sky! It's an exclusive peek at 'Planes'!". USA Today. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
- ↑ "Priyanka Chopra lends voice for Hollywood animated film Planes". Hindustan Times. March 13, 2013. Archived from the original on March 14, 2013. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 "Meet the pilot who kept Disney's film 'Planes' flying right". CNN.com. August 2, 2013. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
- ↑ McClintock, Pamela (June 21, 2013). "CineEurope Preview: Disney Exec on Selling 'The Lone Ranger' Overseas (Q&A)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 8, 2013.
- ↑ Campbell, Brooke (July 12, 2013). "Jessica Marais joins Planes cast downunder". Moviehole. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
- ↑ Armstrong, Josh (March 1, 2013). "Planes trilogy confirmed; Cryer's recasting discussed". Animated Views. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
- 1 2 3 Goldberg, Matt (March 26, 2013). "New Images and Full Voice Cast for PLANES Announced; Includes Val Kilmer, Anthony Edwards, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, John Cleese, and More (UPDATED)". Collider.com. Retrieved March 31, 2013.
- ↑ Sailor, Craig (October 14, 2011). "'Reno 911' actor Carlos Alazraqui brings stand-up to Tacoma". The News Tribune. Retrieved November 5, 2011.
- ↑ Gage, Simon (August 9, 2013). "David Croft: From Formula 1 commentator to the voice of an airship in new movie Planes". Metro. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
- ↑ Hill, Jim (August 6, 2013). "World premiere of Disney "Planes" turns Hollywood Boulevard into a celebrity-filled landing strip". Jim Hill Media. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
- ↑ "D23 Expo: New Art From the Upcoming Disney, Pixar and Disneytoon Movies". ComingSoon.net. August 9, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 "PREVIEW: Disney Planes Franchise to Launch High-Flying Sequel". NYC Aviation. May 13, 2014. Retrieved July 28, 2014.
- ↑ "WATCH: ‘Planes 2: Fire & Rescue’ Full Length Trailer". Stitch Kingdom. 2014-02-05. Retrieved February 6, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 "Meet the Characters from Planes: Fire & Rescue". Disney Insider. March 10, 2014. Retrieved March 10, 2014.
- 1 2 3 "Fighting Wildfires with Second Chances". Honeywell. July 23, 2014. Archived from the original on August 14, 2014. Retrieved July 28, 2014.
- ↑ Alexander, Bryan (June 12, 2014). "Brad Paisley honors dad, firefighters in 'Planes' sequel". USA Today. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 "Planes Fire & Rescue (2014)". British Film Institute. Retrieved August 24, 2014.