@nonfedimemes You see, it's the same car. It gets damaged in the action movie, but that loosens some of the bolts in the car in a way that doesn't do anything catastrophic immediately. When it's left sitting for a while (which it will be in a horror movie) it takes an average of 3 tries to start it.
Huh, if you think about it, horror moves - at least the slasher kind - are basically just action movies where the “hero” is on the other side.
Very funny to put a Ford on the left and a Toyota on the right
@nonfedimemes they don't build them like that anymore :P
Feel like Toyotas are way more likely to start than Fords, but my life has been more dark comedy than horror so perhaps it’s genre-specific
How will they do it when there are only EVs? No key to turn, just a button press if even that.
@nonfedimemes I was thinking about something like "tjey shoukd really try tonget theirncars fromnelsewhere" but then my mind wondered off to how cool it could be, tonhave an action movie, with the car surviving all kinds of action stunts, but then slowly moving the genre into horror, and have it break down there.
Like, if pulled of right, it could sell the horror really well, as the thing the heroes could rely on so much, suddenly fails.
Cars area great conveyor of personality. Vince Gilligan has a great eye for that, every vehicle in those movies says something about their owners. From Jesses Monte Carlo to Maries purple bug all cars reflect personality.
The biggest crime Skylar committed was trading in Walt jr’s Dodge for a Chrysler pt cruiser.
The Camino even gets a spotlight by being in the title of the sequel, where it becomes a shared leitmotiv.