Deccan Chronicle

Dear cars, don’t be fast, be smart

- SURAJ PRASAD

Cars and humans have had a special chemistry ever since they were invented, it gave humanity the much-needed speed for its progress, and suddenly the world seemed a smaller place. These automobile­s, parts of a machinery moving together could create such power. Gradually it became associated with symbols of masculinit­y, sexism etc.

Soon they also evolved in different shapes and sizes giving themselves more character and personalit­y, so much so, that soon one could understand a man’s taste by the car he drives and the fineness of the machine by the man who drove it. Cars also became so much entwined with cinema that you couldn’t imagine a film without it, either the protagonis­t driving it, or the police car chasing the hooligans or a beautiful girl getting stranded because of car trouble and eventually falling in love with the man who stopped to help.

Cars have also been presented in different characters in different films mostly with respect to the relationsh­ip the owner seemed to develop with the car. In year 2006 came Cars, and it completely ruptured that relationsh­ip. Suddenly cars could speak and not communicat­e simply by throwing tantrums like they used to do. It was alive and did not need humans to feel validated. The third addition to the series is quite similar to the previous one and there seems to be a generic plot structure here with a beginning, where Lightning looses the race and goes into an existentia­l crisis, comes on the verge of breaking down and giving up, meets old pals, tries to find motivation and ends up winning the race.

What started in the year 2006 is finally come to a full circle.

Lightning McQueen, the prodigy who made us fall in love with the race track in a totally humane way, has found his own protégé while trying to recover his own Mojo. Lightning goes through the usual motions of denial, then acknowledg­ement, then trying to find solutions to his problems and while he is at it, connects with his old pals who help him regain the motivation and focus required for the race. It does not feel like you are watching a real story or something that could be real. It feels like a rollercoas­ter ride that makes you feel the emotions exactly where it is designed to make you feel.

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