George Barris:Dethroned...finally!

Kit Sullivan

Registered User
Halleluah! I have been complaining for years what a freaking rip-off artist George Barris is!
He built three wildly succesful TV cars (Batmobile and Munster's Coach & 'Dragula'), but he has taken credit for nearly every other 'TV and Movie' car that has come in the meantime.
I own a 'Starsky & Hutch' Torino, and as such I am very familiar with the show-cars history.
At a travelling Barris-sponsored 'TV and Movie' car-show a few years ago, Barris had a 'S&H' Torino displayed with his company'ss name painted on the fender...a car he had absolutely NOTHING to do with.
He also had a KITT from 'Knight Rider', and a 'General Lee' in his show...two more cars he was not involved with in any real way.
For the last season of Knight Rider, he WAS contracted to make some mechanical modifications to KITT m from a Universal-Studio's in-house designer. This certainly does not constitute the right to claim that he 'developed' the concept!

At a question and answer session, I first complimented his work, and then asked why he takes credit for others work. The crowd was silent, he was silent, and within 30 seconds I was escorted out of the show and he left the stage.
I found out later that the guys who 'asked' me to leave were Barris' dip-~~~~~ son and the show's promoter.

Screw him!

The article below was in the LA Times:



Star cars set off alarms
Universal's cease and desist order against George Barris highlights the problem of accurate credit for famous movie vehicles.
By Bob Pool, Times Staff Writer
May 4, 2007




Battle over hollywood's custom carsIf he could go back to the future, maybe famed movie car icon George Barris wouldn't have had that gadget-filled DeLorean parked in front of his North Hollywood customizing shop during his big ceremony.

The "Back to the Future" DeLorean sat near the Batmobile, the Monkeemobile, the General Lee from the "Dukes of Hazzard" TV show, K.I.T.T. from the "Knight Rider" series and other automobiles symbolizing Barris' car-customizing skills on March 23 as city officials commemorated his six-decade Hollywood career.

Barris and City Councilman Tom LaBonge unveiled a street sign designating Riverside Drive and Riverton Avenue as "George Barris Place" while hundreds of fans clustered around the glitzy cars applauded and cheered.

There was no cheering from nearby Universal Studios, however. Or from some of Hollywood's other movie car customizers.

Studio officials responded with a cease and desist order demanding that Barris never again make "misrepresentations regarding any involvement with the 'Back to the Future' films." They called upon Barris to remove images of the flying DeLorean from his company's website and restrict his display of replicas of the gull-winged car used by Michael J. Fox to time travel in the popular 1985 movie and its sequels.

Others, meanwhile, complained that film cars such as the K.I.T.T., the General Lee and the Monkeemobile were not originally designed and built by Barris, either.

The dust-up illustrates the confusion that often exists among car buffs over "picture cars," which can come in different versions. "Hero cars" are the nicest and actors are photographed in those; "stunt cars" are less perfect and are used for chases and crashes; "promotional cars" are displayed for publicity and do not actually appear on film; and "replica cars" are privately built copies of the real thing.

That explains why there are multiple Batmobiles — countless fiberglass knockoffs owned by "Batman" movie fans as well as the original Barris-built version. And why more than 300 General Lees were said to have been jumped, crunched and crashed in the filming of the "Dukes" series — while hundreds of more orange-painted 1969 Dodge Chargers were customized by fans.

A replica of the "Back to the Future" DeLorean is what attracted the attention of Universal Studios during Barris' street-naming ceremony.

"George Barris had absolutely nothing to do with the design or construction of the DeLorean time travel vehicle," said Bob Gale, who was a writer and producer on the film. "The DeLorean was designed on paper by Ron Cobb and Andrew Probert, and it was built under the supervision of special effects supervisor Kevin Pike and construction coordinator Michael Scheffe."

Barris acknowledged that the DeLorean displayed at the ceremony was never used in any of the "Back to the Future" films. It is a replica car that was brought to the event by its owner.

According to Barris, an animated gallery of movie cars displayed on his website included the DeLorean because he once customized one for a Universal-licensed collector who wanted to display it. He said Universal also asked him to "clean up" a DeLorean stunt car that had been built on a Volkswagen chassis so it could be used for promotional work.

"I didn't work on the show and I've never said I did," said Barris, who is in his mid-80s.

Barris was responsible for creating the 1966 Batmobile, which he famously constructed from a 1955 Lincoln Futura concept car. But he played only a supporting role on the General Lee, the Ecto-1 and other movie cars, according to entertainment industry experts.

Credits for "Dukes of Hazzard" list Ken Fritz, Tom Sarmento, Rich Sephton, A.J. Thrasher, Andre Veluzat and Renaud Veluzat as car builders. Barris is credited for "car modifications."

For the 1982 "Knight Rider" movie and its 84-episode TV series, Scheffe designed and built the computer-crammed K.I.T.T. car used by David Hasselhoff. Barris was hired to build an upgraded version of the car for the show's third season with concept sketches from Scheffe.

But Barris "kind of makes it sound like he came up with the original concept," said movie car fan Nate Truman, a TV graphics operator who lives in Gardena and owns a replica Batmobile.

"Ghostbusters" credits do not list a designer for Ecto-1, the 1959 Cadillac ambulance that carried the ghost-busting team and its gear. But actor-writer Dan Aykroyd is usually given the nod for suggesting an Ectomobile in early versions of the script.

Barris, however, converted another Cadillac vehicle into a replica Ecto-1 that was displayed in an Illinois car museum. He shows the Ecto-1 on his website. "All we did was the promotional car, for publicity for the film," he said.

Cahuenga Boulevard cinema car customizer Dean Jeffries is credited with building the Monkeemobile for the 1960s sitcom "The Monkees." He built two of them — one for use in the show and one for display at car shows and other promotions — from a pair of 1966 Pontiac GTO convertibles.

Barris said he now owns the Monkeemobile show car. He displays it at his Riverside Drive shop.

"Dean Jeffries designed it and Dick Dean built it. We finished it and we bought it" and now includes it in his own collection of star cars, Barris said. "I always credit Dean Jeffries for doing it."

Jeffries said he has grown weary of Barris taking improper credit for work — including the painting of the words "Little Bastard" on the Porsche that actor James Dean was driving when he was fatally injured in a 1955 crash.

But the credit line is sometimes confusing.

Barris often autographs movie cars in his own collection that were actually designed and customized by others. That's how car collector Christopher Ingrassia of East Dundee, Ill., came to own a car from the film "Taxi" that bears Barris' signature on its hood when, in fact, it was built by film-car customizer Eddie Paul.

"It leads somebody to believe that he did the original car, and he didn't do it," said Ingrassia, who plans to buff off Barris' name. "I don't want to diminish George. I just want the record straight."

Paul, an El Segundo customizer who created cars for "Grease," said he now photographically documents all of the vehicles he makes for movies.

"The car guys want to get the story out while George Barris is still alive and can be confronted," Paul said. "I don't personally dislike him. But he's messing up the industry by misrepresenting history."

K.I.T.T. creator Scheffe, a Mar Vista resident who now is an art director for Sony Pictures Imageworks, agreed.

"George is an institution. He's done amazing things. I don't want to step on anyone's toes. But it's good for the people who did the work to get credit for it."

For his part, Barris said his references in interviews to "our cars" and "my stunt crew" reflect his allegiance to the Hollywood car community as a whole. Over the course of a lengthy TV series' production, picture car construction can be "a group effort," he said.

He signs other craftsmen's cars "if they're in my Barris Star Cars Collection. It doesn't mean I built it," he said.

"I promote and encourage the car industry. That's what I've always done."
 
There are a lot of these cars in the Volo car museum. Some are real and some are knockoffs. I live about 2 miles from a guy that has made an industry of making knockoff General Lees. He buys all the cars he can get his hands on paints them and sells them. What a shame to see what he does to some really nice cars. Whats wores people come from all over the country to buy them.
 
I don't have a problem with people making replicas, clones, knock-offs...whatever, as long as they don't pass them off as the 'real deal'.

There are several instances where someone has tried to sell a 'Starsky & Hutch' Torino as one that was actually used on the show, but it is usually pretty easy to determine that it was not. That also bugs me.

But what really irks me is Barris claiming he developed the cars in question.
To me, that's just out-right plagerism.

Painting a big white stripe on the side of an otherwise stock 2-door Gran Torino with mags on it may not be a 'Foose' style customizing job, however it was the original idea and product of a designer working for Spelling-Goldberg productions...not Barris! He had nothing to do with it.

He even takes credit for the 'Monkeemobile' and the 'Black Beauty', two cars that were famously known to have been designed and built by the genuis Dean Jeffries.

The real story about the 'Batmobile', Barris' most famous 'legitimate' creation, is that it was Jeffries who was originally hired to build a complete custom, ground-up 'Batmobile' for the then-new 'Batman' show debuting in 18 months.
When the schedule was moved to only 6 months, Jeffries backed out saying that he couldn't do a completely original car in so short a time.
In desperation, Barris was approached, and took the job. He just happened to have the 'Lincoln Futura' show-car sitting behind his shop, having taken it from Ford on trade for monies owed to him.
Well used and with over 100,000 miles on it, the 'Futura' had no life left as a 'show car'.
Barris modified the fins, canopy,and front clip, and gave it a bunch of little 'Bat-Man' style touches and the 'Batmobile ' was born.
Barris takes full credit for 'designing' the Batmobile when in reality it is still 90% 'Futura'.

I have nom problem with his 'sheetmetal talent', just his plagerism of other's work.
 
something i did not know, but found on accident while looking for pictures of the coyote from hardcastle and mccormick (which barris did design) was this

2066627_34_full.jpg


this is the "Dagger DX" which was used in the knight rider episode "knights of the fast lane" its a modified Ferrari 308, made to look similar to the 1984 Ferrari GTO

the car apparantly is owned by barris...
 
He also needs to give credit to "Bad" Bud Holmes for building the Munter Coach and Dragula for the movies. They were built in Tennessee and shipped to Hollywood. I remember the Dracula, my father was a friend of Mr Holmes. He was interviewed by our Chattanooga Tennessee News, I believe it was our channel 12. The interview is uploaded to YouTube, but it seems that someone has tried to keep it buried as it is harder to find than anything newly posted.
 
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