1971 Opel GT
Comments about this vehicle
Author | Message |
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◊ 2008-10-03 14:34 |
How nice! ![]() ![]() ![]() and what a shame... ![]() ![]() |
◊ 2008-10-04 18:32 |
That suc*s... ![]() |
◊ 2010-09-06 15:03 |
Reference to /vehicle_11071-Opel-GT-1969.html |
◊ 2011-06-26 15:38 |
Really sucks that they smashed this beautiful retro automobile for that one short scene. ![]() |
◊ 2011-06-26 16:58 |
Though it looked not bad on the first view, it was a clunker. Have a look on the back wheel arches - 100% putty. Odd, that at the crash the putty-chunks weren't flying around. This is the worst problem of the GT, the body. It's so complicated made, that a car with a rotten body is unsalvageable. Or a good object for cobbling and cheating the next buyer. The technic is no problem at all, just simple and cheap Kadett C, resp. Ascona A-stuff. |
◊ 2022-07-22 19:03 |
Damn film must have been sponsored by VW. The classic Sunbeam stalls, and the Opel rear-ended in humiliating fashion, yet the VW Karmann-Ghia, a lipstick on a pig enhancement by any other name, and a car that only appeared in the titles and NEVER in any episodes unlike the other two, gets the glory. I will not begrudge the filmmakers who are entitled to their opinions and artistic expression, but anyone who tries the lazy filmmaker's way of trying to remake something great in their own interpreation is doomed to rubbish. Apart from Steve Carrell, this movie, as the kids say, sucked. |
◊ 2023-09-21 13:57 |
The Sunbeam doesn't stall; it merely runs out of gas shortly after departing the museum since it was a display car. We're lucky we even saw it running at all as cars on display in museums typically have all of the gasoline and oil drained out. |