I wonder if the mock diffuser at the back of the new Kia Picanto will make it look so sporty and fast that it’ll stop it being tailgated on motorways, as is the fate of so many small cars.
And will its newly beefed-up front end shoo slowcoaches from the outside lane in a way that escapes others of its ilk? Look out mate, one of the Cubes from Terrahawks (ask your dad) is chasing you.
I liked the old Picanto very much, and I expect I’ll like the new one, which got its prices last week ahead of deliveries starting in July. From £15,595, it arrives with a nose that’s so technical and intricate as to be almost post-aggressive.
But aggression, as m’colleague Steve Cropley passingly noted recently, is still very much ‘in’ for new cars. He was a bit sad about that, as I am.
I wonder how much it plays its part in road rage and angst. There is a tendency for us to find faces in inanimate objects. Apparently it’s an evolutionary hangover that conditioned us to spot faces hiding in bushes, either predator or human enemy, and it even primes us to interpret them as wanting to kill us. And now, every time you glance in the mirror, here comes something that appears to be exceedingly cross. Would we all get along better if cars looked more cheerful? Something with a big smile on its chops?
Quite often we’re told a new model has a more aggressive, dynamic stance. There are design-trade tricks to enhance those characteristics: making a car appear wider below the hips with wheel arches that bulge, a high window line and with more frontal area given over to cooling; some gloss black detailing; even some red piping, because red bits are always faster.
But I think the trend towards angrier-looking cars has mostly been accelerated by new lighting technology. Round headlight reflectors, once the only way to project meagre lamp light onto the road, gave a car bright, wide-open ‘eyes’; a cheesy grille could do the rest. Was any car more happy to see you, albeit like a hamster pleased to have stuffed its cheeks, than an Austin-Healey Sprite?
The latest lights can be the narrowest, angriest slits but still be so bright that the UN is investigating how much they dazzle.
It’s still possible to have round headlights, of course, because today lights can be any shape we like. The Alpine A110, Jeep Wrangler and Honda E stick with round, but that shows circularity is largely the preserve of cars that are meant to look retro or classically styled. Round for round’s sake is vanishingly unusual these days.
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The motoring media needs to have a word with itself, every new car that gets an agressive look it's written up as a good thing (eg. the latest Qashqai, a school run car)
Manufacturers are just creating vehicles to appease the mood of the general public. Angry. Pure and simple. It's a clever tactic.
It's not often I've agreed with Matt Prior lately. I think he comes across as a bit of a grumpy grandad in a lot of what he says, particularly about EVs, but got to agree on this. I hate aggressive looking cars, and can't help but subconsciously decide that their drivers aren't my kind of people. Silly I know, given how hard it is to avoid them.
The good news is that the tide is starting to turn. New Volvos, including Matt's nemesis, the EX30 have happy, simple, relatively duct-free faces, as do Polestars. Mini's latest 3 door looks less like its furious that it's just been punched in the face than the old one, and the Neue Klasse BMWs look less like a vest wearer full of Stella than the cars they'll replace too. Bring it on