Sunday, November 1, 2009

Bet You Haven't Heard of This

Behold, quite possibly the best known car of the 1960s: the 1955 Lincoln Futura concept car.

William Schmidt, Lincoln-Mercury's chief designer, supposedly came up with the design when he went scuba diving. He saw a shark cutting through the water and dreamed up a wide car with sharp fins.

Whatever the inspiration was, it worked. It has a very '50s futuristic feeling. Think the Jetsons stamped into angled, sharp metal.

The rear end just looks pissed, especially in color.
It's going to eat anything that comes too close.

The interior is like any other concept car. It looks really cool, yet is incredibly impractical.
The speedometer, odometer and every other possible instrument and idiot light is crammed into the middle of the steering wheel. All the dashboard controls were concealed behind rolling metal covers.

A compass is on the top of the driver's side of the dash and a clock on the passenger's side.

Oddly, this is one of the few driveable concept cars. Everything, even the instruments in the steering wheel, worked.

So how is this the best known car of the '60s? Because the Lincoln Futura became this:

Yes. Lincoln built the original Batmobile. Kind of.

Instead of getting scrapped at the end of the '50s, George Barris bought it. When ABC called and needed a Batmobile in three weeks, Barris decided to modify the Futura.
On closer inspection, it's fairly obvious. Barris just slapped on some extra fiberglass, some props and altered the front end a little.

He didn't even change the interior that much.
Chop off half the steering wheel, change the instrument pod, and there you go.

Its good that the Futura managed to live on even if it had to get customized in order to survive. Most concepts from the '50s got scrapped. Even if it managed to survive that fate, history would've forgotten the Futura.

Instead it got a second life as a child's dream car. After all, who wouldn't want a jet powered two-seater?

5 comments:

  1. "Holy sitcom, Batman!"

    All these years Robin's lines for when the Batmobile was started has stuck with me, "Batteries to power, turbines to speed."

    The movies may have had a bigger budget, but no other Batmobile has had as much soul as the Barris-modified Futura.

    ReplyDelete
  2. There is something distinctly authentic about this car. Maybe because so much of the Futura shines through.

    But one of my other favorite Batmobiles was the one from the early '90s animated series.

    Never mind that it was probably two blocks long, it was a very cool looking car.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I like the Nemo's car from "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" http://www.showrods.com/gallery_pages/nemos_car1.html

    ReplyDelete
  4. That is a cool car. If I remember right they just took a semi-truck's chassis and flipped it around.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Jason,

    My father in low was LUIGI SEGRE, owner of GHIA till his death in 1963.
    He had brilliant intuitions for wonderful cars, like this one.

    For further informations in order to honorate his memory, please write me at

    Famiglia SEGRE
    HOTEL LA MERIDIANA
    ITALY 17033 GARLENDA
    aline.segre@lameridiana.eu

    ReplyDelete