Barris TV and Movie Cars

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Motorbooks International, 1996 - 128 páginas
"Barris TV and Movie Cars" takes you backstage to see how vehicles were chosen for their roles, what kind of customizing was necessary for each, and how it was done. Among the famous customs that were transformed for starring roles were "Ala Kart," Shirley Barris' 1958 Thunderbird, the "Chrisman Roadster," the "Hirohata Mercury," Bob Metz's 1950 Buick, and "Villa Riviera." Most outrageous of all were the Barris Kustoms' movie and TV cars that were created completely from scratch including the "Batmobile," "Drag-u-la," "Flintmobile," "KITT," "Mannix Roadster," "SSXR," "Thunder Charger," and "Zebra Mustang." Barris Kustoms also built stunt cars, process cars, and specialty vehicles. They're all here in "Barris TV and Movie Cars"

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Sobre o autor (1996)

The one name, the one man, who epitomizes kustom cars is George Barris. A man who started working on cars during World War II, George is still promoting shows, handing out trophies and still kissing the trophy girls. In the 1950s, George and his brother Sam developed what came to be known as the "Barris look." All of the cars to come out of their shop in southern California exhibited a certain cleanliness of line and sophistication that had more in common with sophisticated coach-built European cars than American hot rods of the same period. At the same time that George and Sam were building some very famous cars like the Hirohata Merc and the Polynesian, George started to photograph their cars and write stories for magazines like Rod&Custom. Not only does George Barris write as an expert on custom cars, in many cases he was the builder of the car he's describing.

David Fetherston is a writer, photographer, and artist. He has written several books, including Big Book of Barris, Barris TV and Movie Cars, Hot Rod Memorabilia and Collectibles, and American Woodys. Fetherston resides in Sebastopol, CA.

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