Herbie

Herbie

Herbie at 2011 Wizard World Anaheim.
Make/Model Volkswagen Beetle
Builder Dr. Gustav Stumpfel
Information
Full name Herbie the Love Bug
Gender Male
Occupation Racing car
Nationality German American

Herbie the Love Bug is a sentient anthropomorphic 1963 Volkswagen Beetle, a character that is featured in several Walt Disney motion pictures starting with the 1968 feature film The Love Bug. He has a mind of his own and is capable of driving himself, and is also a serious contender in auto racing competitions. Throughout most of the franchise, Herbie is distinguished by red, white and blue racing stripes from front to back bumper, a racing-style number 53 on the front luggage compartment lid, doors, and engine lid, and a yellow-on-black '63 California license plate with the registration OFP 857.

History

Herbie's origins are firmly established in The Love Bug (1968). He was bought from Peter Thorndyke's showroom by San Francisco socialite Mrs. Van Luit for her upstairs maid, but returned shortly afterwards due to reliability problems, and purchased by race-driver Jim Douglas (Dean Jones), who had earlier stood up for him against the pompous Thorndyke (David Tomlinson). Tennessee Steinmetz (Buddy Hackett), Jim's friend and housemate, names the car "Herbie" after his uncle Herb, a professional boxer whose broken nose greatly resembled the hood of a Volkswagen Beetle.

In Herbie Rides Again (1974), Herbie has been left to Tennessee's widowed aunt, Mrs. Steinmetz (Helen Hayes). Mrs. Steinmetz and her displaced neighbor, Nicole Harris (Stefanie Powers), try to save her house from being bulldozed by Alonzo Hawk (Keenan Wynn) with the help of Herbie. During the film it is explained that after several successful races with Herbie, Douglas entered foreign racing circuits, while his sidekick Tennessee is residing in Tibet to help his ailing instructor.

By Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo (1977), Douglas enters Herbie in the Trans-France Race and recruits mechanic friend Wheely Applegate (Don Knotts) to assist him. Herbie falls in love with a Lancia Montecarlo named Giselle and Douglas with her driver Diane Darcy (Julie Sommars). Herbie also finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time when the stolen Etoile de Joie diamond is hidden in his fuel tank.

In Herbie Goes Bananas (1980), Douglas has retired from racing after Monte Carlo and leaves Herbie to his nephew, Pete Stancheck (Stephen W. Burns), who plans to enter Herbie in the Brazil Grand Primeo. In the interim, Herbie befriends an orphan named Paco (Joaquin Garay, III), with whom he wreaks havoc onboard cruise ship the Sun Princess, prompting the overzealous Captain Blythe (Harvey Korman) to force Herbie to "walk the plank". Having fallen into the ocean, Herbie is rescued by Paco and disguised as a taxi, later to stop a gang of con artists from stealing ancient Inca gold. Early in their partnership, Paco gives Herbie the nickname "Ocho", the Spanish word for the number 8; purportedly because the digits 5 and 3 in Herbie's racing number, 53, were combined to produce "8" (5+3 = 8) and possibly to rhyme with "Vocho", the Beetle's colloquial name in Mexico.

After the Mexico debacle, Douglas takes Herbie and opens a driving school in the TV series Herbie, the Love Bug, Then Douglas meets a woman named Susan Maclane and her three kids Julie, Matthew and Robbie.

Hank Cooper (Bruce Campbell) becomes the owner of Herbie in the 1997 made-for-television movie The Love Bug. Here Herbie's origins are explained: an elderly German engineer named Dr. Gustav Stumpfel, was building Herbie when a picture of his deceased wife fell into a vat of molten metal, Stumpfel's love for her animating Herbie. During the film Stumpfel is forced to build an evil Volkswagen counterpart to Herbie, "Horace the Hate Bug," from a sample of Herbie's original metal. Horace's personality is influenced by the narcissism of Herbie's former owner Simon when he has a picture of himself dropped into the metal vats, and kills Herbie during the film. Cooper buries Herbie, but the return of Jim Douglas sets Cooper to rebuild the fallen Love Bug (with the help of repentant Dr. Stumpfel) and have him race against Simon and Horace. In this race, Herbie ultimately divides himself in half (as in the original film) to win the race.

Over the years Herbie is passed down from owner to owner, competing in many races, until he is bought by Maggie Peyton (Lindsay Lohan) in Herbie: Fully Loaded (2005), eventually to compete in a demolition derby and NASCAR races. In this film, Herbie falls in love with a yellow Volkswagen New Beetle.

Films

Occupation Film
The Love Bug
(1968)
Herbie Rides Again
(1974)
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo
(1977)
Herbie Goes Bananas
(1980)
The Love Bug
(1997)
Herbie: Fully Loaded
(2005)
Director Robert Stevenson Vincent McEveety Peyton Reed Angela Robinson
Producer(s) Bill Walsh Ron Miller Kevin Corcoran
Ron Miller
Don Tait
Joan Van Horn
Irwin Marcus
Robert Simonds
Writer(s) Screenplay by:
Bill Walsh
Don DaGradi
Story by:
Gordon Buford
Screenplay by:
Bill Walsh
Story by:
Gordon Buford
Arthur Alsberg
Don Nelson
Don Tait Ryan Rowe Screenplay by:
Thomas Lennon
Robert Ben Garant
Alfred Gough
Miles Millar
Story by:
Thomas Lennon
Robert Ben Garant
Mark Perez
Composer George Bruns Frank De Vol Shirley Walker Mark Mothersbaugh
Cinematography Edward Colman Frank Phillips Leonard J. South Frank Phillips Russ Alsobrook Greg Gardiner
Editor(s) Cotton Warburton Gordon D. Brenner Chip Masamitsu Wendy Greene Bricmont
Production company Walt Disney Productions Walt Disney Television Walt Disney Pictures
Robert Simonds Productions
Distribution Buena Vista Distribution Buena Vista Television Buena Vista Pictures
Runtime 108 minutes 88 minutes 104 minutes 98 minutes 88 minutes 101 minutes
Release date December 24, 1968 June 6, 1974 June 24, 1977 June 25, 1980 November 30, 1997 June 22, 2005

Box office performance

Film Release date Box office gross (as of 2017)[1] Rotten Tomatoes
Domestic Domestic adjusted Worldwide
The Love Bug December 24, 1968 (limited)
March 13, 1969
$51,264,000 $312,277,200 N/A 75%
Herbie Rides Again June 6, 1974 $38,229,000 $176,834,700 N/A 80%
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo June 24, 1977 $29,000,000 $111,721,400 N/A 67%
Herbie Goes Bananas June 25, 1980 $18,000,000 $57,776,900 N/A 40%
The Love Bug November 30, 1997 $0— TV film — 51%
Herbie: Fully Loaded June 22, 2005 $66,023,816 $89,096,100 $144,146,816 41%
Total $205,516,816 $747,706,300 $280,639,816+ 59%

Television series

Herbie, the Love Bug
Genre Sitcom
Starring
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Running time 48 minutes
Release
Original network CBS
Original release March 17 (1982-03-17) – April 14, 1982 (1982-04-14)

A television series, Herbie, the Love Bug or Herbie the Matchmaker,[2] was aired in 1982 on CBS, Dean Jones reprised his movie role for the series.[3] Five episodes were made:[4]

Cast

A two-hour film, Herbie the Matchmaker, was created by re-editing the series episodes.

Other appearances

Guises and paint schemes

Herbie's appearance remained consistent throughout the first four film entries as well as the 1982 television series (Herbie the Matchmaker). There were only minor, subtle changes. The 1997 TV movie and Herbie: Fully Loaded featured major overhauls in Herbie's appearance, as there were different production crews working for Disney by this time.

In order to create the effect of Herbie driving himself, Disney concocted a detailed system of sprockets and pulleys connected to a second steering column under the front seat for a rear seat driver. There was also a second set of pedal assemblies, clutch cables and a shifter extension. In The Love Bug, the rear seat driver sat low enough to see over the windshield but still out of the view of the camera. For Herbie Rides Again and Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo, Disney installed a hood-mounted Carello fog light that concealed a small camera which allowed the rear seat driver to view the street and sit lower.[5]

The Love Bug (1968)

In the original film, The Love Bug, the original racing stripes differ from those in later movies; the stripes do not cover the valances or louvers of the car and the blue is a lighter shade. Also, Herbie features color-keyed running boards, while in later films the running boards are standard black.[6]

During the film, depending on the scene, the wheels change from standard VW wheels (although fitted with plain hubcaps with no VW logo) to specially widened wheels on the racing Herbies. During one scene (when Tennessee is hanging out of the window), the "53" logo (a.k.a. "gumball") on the passenger-side door is missing. The door is also cut along the lower edge at an angle to enable the car to tilt over to the right on two wheels.[6]

One of the modified racing Herbies featured a Porsche 356 engine, brakes and KONI shock absorbers. All Herbies in The Love Bug had the VW badges removed from the hood and featured plain non-VW hubcaps. The hood-mounted VW logo was replaced with a plain disc of the same diameter, colored to match the body. All VWs logos were removed to avoid any trademark conflicts.[6]

Herbie Rides Again (1974)

In Herbie Rides Again, Herbie features revised racing stripes, with the original blue switched to a dark navy. In addition, the stripes were applied over the valances and louvers, and the front hood was recycled for 1982's television series Herbie the Matchmaker. Herbie also received a hood-mounted Carello fog light, and his running boards were now the more conventional black.[6]

Additionally, Herbie was running on standard wheels yet again. Volkswagen also promoted the film by having a Type 1 Beetle, complete with Herbie livery, in every showroom. There are various model errors in this film, such as the later "big window" (post-1964) Beetles being used. Also of note is the "cut-n-shut" engine cover after the warehouse break-in. The Beetle used was a late model, having a more bulbous flat-bottomed lid with an earlier rounded bottom edge welded on.

After the success of The Love Bug, the film was heavily endorsed by Volkswagen, whose sales of the Beetle were seriously lagging. As such, the company insisted that the VW logos appear on Herbie. Both the hub cap VW logo and hood-mounted VW logo were reinstated.

Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo (1977)

In Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo, Herbie is again fitted with wide racing wheels (Goodyear GT radials), and has an external fuel filler cap. Post-1967 Beetles did feature the fuel tank accessible on the right side behind the fender; the silver cap itself, however, was fake and added for the film's storyline.[7] With the addition of the fuel filler, the antenna is now a retractable unit fitted on the front cowling, near the windshield wipers. He has a roll cage again, and he has Monte Carlo racing stickers on his windows (one on the front window, two on the left back window, and one on the rear window). Herbie still sports the hood-mounted Carello fog light with an added black cover sporting the company name. He now has gray bucket seats instead of stitched seats. Throughout this film, Herbie has an asymmetrical door mirror. There were a total of 9 VWs used in Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo. Many of these cars were recycled for use in Herbie Goes Bananas.[6]

One of the many "rusted" Herbies of Bananas

Herbie Goes Bananas (1980)

In Herbie Goes Bananas, the hood-mounted light, the grey roll cage bar, the Monte Carlo racing stickers and the silver gas cap were removed. He still had his gray bucket seats, asymmetrical door mirror and his Goodyear GT Radial racing tires and rims, and Herbie's sunroof was the original light gray rather than the dark gray from Monte Carlo. The rust seen on the car in this film was painted on some of the Herbies. The car that "walks the plank" in the movie was never recovered from the sea. It was tossed overboard from the SS Cozumel ferry ship (not The Sun Princess cruise ship). The car is somewhere between La Paz and Baja California. The car thrown overboard was not a proper car and had many wooden parts.

Herbie Goes Bananas also featured the same later model door mirror as Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo. Herbie set a Guinness World Record as the first car to go through the Panama Canal during filming in 1979. Herbie's name is only mentioned 3 times in the film by the garage owner, apart from the two times Herbie honks his horn at Paco trying to say his name.

Some of these cars were recycled for Herbie the Matchmaker in 1982.

One of the actual film cars used with its flip wheel chassis in the bullfighting scenes now resides in Sydney, Australia. Another one was displayed in the Cars of the Stars Motor Museum until the museum's closure in 2011. Since then its new location remains unknown.

Volkswagen ceased the sale of Beetles in the USA one year before the film's release.

The Love Bug (1997)

In the television film, The Love Bug, there were some significant changes. The graphics used were copied from the 1974 Volkswagen of America decal kit, and the position on the front hood 53 was higher up. The racing stripes were different sizes, and the shade of blue reverted to the lighter version used in the original 1968 movie. The sunroof was a solid white (vs. gray) and was missing the racing stripes. Herbie's wheels were standard Beetle wheels, instead of the wider GoodYear GT Radial racing tires used in Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo and Herbie Goes Bananas, and the seats were regular instead of the gray bucket seats he had previously had.

Herbie: Fully Loaded (2005)

2005 Fully Loaded version of Herbie, specifically his "Street Race" look

In Herbie: Fully Loaded, Herbie went through several "costume changes" throughout the movie, changing his style dramatically from scene to scene.

More than 30 different Herbies were used during the shooting of this film.[6] One is on display at the Volo Auto Museum,[8] and another one used during the NASCAR racing segment of the film is preserved at the Peterson Automotive Museum.[9]

A "fake" Herbie
Herbies at Stamford Hall

References

  1. "Franchises: Herbie the Love Bug". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  2. "Herbie, the Love Bug" (1982) on IMDb
  3. The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. Ballantine Books. 2003. p. 523. ISBN 0-345-45542-8.
  4. "Herbie, the Love Bug (TV Series 1982– )".
  5. "LoveBugFans.com - The Ultimate Herbie Community". lovebugfans.net.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Lovebugfans.com - The Disney Cars". 28 October 2009.
  7. "The VW Beetle -- Changes Through the Years". www.vw-resource.com.
  8. "Volo Auto Museum Cars for Sale - Herbie Fully Loaded". Volocars.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-24. Retrieved 2013-01-01.
  9. "Petersen Automotive Museum: The Vault". Petersen.org. Retrieved 2013-01-01.


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