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Autocar's rears of the year
The front end of a car is surely its most important reference point. This is the car’s face, its point of recognition, the canvas upon which the designers must brand a car while simultaneously individualising it, cooling it, crash protecting it and aiding its cleaving of the air. But actually, the bits of other people’s cars we see most often are their back ends. That is, obviously, because we follow the rear end of some sort of vehicle for most of the miles that we drive.
Rear ends, then. We’ve picked some of the best on sale today, and a trio of the worst. Plus, some greats from the past. Having trawled through catalogues of cars in the quest for sexy back ends – there, said it – it’s surprising to discover just how many cars, sporting or not, flaunt similar sculptural flourishes.
There’ll be a deep back bumper, this sacrificial plastic apron cheaper to replace than creased sheet metal. The numberplate often nests within an inverted trapezoid. Many cars have a black under-bumper zone, which many designers are unable to resist shaping into a diffuser, regardless of whether the car is a supercar with a use for it or a shopper’s hatchback.
If it’s a middling to expensive rear end, there’ll be twin exhausts, perhaps four, but only one of them is likely to be functional. There’ll also be some sort of night-time LED lighting ‘signature’, of which there are now so many that it’s hard to remember who has appropriated what illuminating hieroglyphic.
Distinctiveness, on the other hand, and sometimes beauty emerge from the proportions of glasshouse to main body, the rear deck height, the muscularity of the wings, the wrap of the screen and the deployment of aero accessories. So here’s our choice, some picked for beauty, some for originality, some for their implied promise.
We've picked out the best on sale today, and added some classics from the archives. And then, for contrast, we've picked a few rears you might prefer to avoid.
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Ferrari 812 Superfast
It’s not beautiful, particularly, but it’s certainly fascinating, from the chamfered edges of the Ferrari 812 Superfast’s recessed rear screen to the drape of rear deck and wings over its tail. A diffuser in body colour rather than black – shock – and rear arch air extractors decisively underwrite the Superfast’s stop-and-stare powers.
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Ford GT
Low, wide, busy, much of it a series of voids, the GT’s rear end is not quite your typical hypercar’s. Once you’ve spotted the extraordinary taper of its cockpit, partly hidden by the rear wing, you’ll see why. It’s one of the most intriguing automotive rear ends on sale today.
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Fiat 500
Pert, cute, curvy, charming, irresistible, sexy – pick your adjective. Today’s Fiat 500 is well proportioned, if a little too tall, and a brilliant evocation of the 1957 original, especially given that its engine sits at the other end. Terrific, even without the retro paints and limited-edition flourishes.
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Jaguar F-Type coupé
There’s E-Type in it, but the F-Type Coupé is its own car. Its stance is just right, its rear screen sexily redolent of its forebear and the S’s close-set, centrally exiting pipes suggestive of raw, exciting potency.
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Chevrolet Corvette Z06
It’s hard to beat the drama of a quartet of close-set exhaust pipes eyeing you like missile launchers. Add slightly sinister tail-lights, a big means-business diffuser, a contrast-colour wing, a double-bubble roof, bold badging – and wham! The Corvette Z06 is modern American muscle.
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BMW M4
It’s a semi-formal notchback coupé with a boot, but the pulling, stretching, cutting and smoothing of the M4’s rear end oozes understated brawn. This is tweaking and teasing at its exquisite best.
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Lotus Elise Sport 220
This is the Elise rear end as shaped by Russell Carr for his 2001(!) facelift of the car. It’s been tweaked since but this is still a pretty, curvily spare rear end entirely suggestive of the Elise’s legendary lightness and agility.
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Rolls-Royce Wraith
There’s svelte heft here, aristocratic bearing, beauty and a restrained sensuality not often seen in a Rolls- Royce. The Wraith’s potency is hinted at too, its ample tyres pushed to the edge of their billowed wings’ edges, the fastback tail suggesting bunched power. Served on velvet.
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From the archives: Ferrari 250 GTO 1962
Lusciously muscled haunches, a recessed Kamm tail, a gently wrapping rear screen, a king-sized filler cap, no bumpers, menacing air extractors aft of fat tyres – and cheap tail-lights. Could this be the most sexily brutal back end ever?
In pictures: the best of the Ferrari 70th anniversary celebration at Maranello
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From the archives: Jaguar E-Type
It shouts speed, with a sensuous flourish. Many thought the E-Type shouted sex even louder, although the long bonnet and its air intake’s suggestive gape did the job more wantonly. Enzo Ferrari thought this Jag the world’s most beautiful car.
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From the archives: Austin Mini 1959
This rear end almost resembles the (clothed) contours of a human posterior. It may seem basic but the Mini’s shape is very sophisticated. When design maestro Pininfarina was asked for an opinion, his reply was “don’t change a thing”.
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From the archives: Porsche 911 Carrera 4S (996 series) 2002
The most famous sports car ever has had more design iterations than any car on earth. And the wide-tracked, voluptuously curved, subtly muscular rear end of the 2002 Carrera 4S is one of the best. The front? Hmm, not quite so good.
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Back ends you'll want to overtake: Honda FCX Clarity
The paucity of hydrogen fuel stations should reduce the repeating agony of explaining why you bought a car resembling a creature from Blue Planet. But only a little. And the Honda FCX Clarity’s busy rear end is one of its less troubled views.
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Back ends you'll want to overtake: Mercedes-Benz GLE coupé
The BMW X6 could occupy this slot, but the massive, high-riding, dam-like back end of the preposterously proportioned GLE Coupé just shades it. That chrome spar, and yet another diffuser, can’t disguise this big booty.
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Back ends you'll want to overtake: Toyota Prius
Yes, it does need to cut through the air like a prey-seeking hawk, but must the Prius really look like this? True, its rear end doesn’t appear as weird when viewed square on, but a flash of flank will have you wondering who signed this creature off.