In Cars 2, Finn McMissle uses an underwater respirator. The Cars also ingest real food, like pistachio ice cream, sushi and snack food, and get the hiccups revealing that they have a diaphragm in addition to a stomach - just like living creatures, they have internal organs!
How are the cars alive in cars?
There is evidence to prove that they are biologically alive. First, they have tongues, which allows them to eat, drink, and talk. Second, they eat. Cars 2 had Mater eat wasabi thinking it was pistachio ice cream, meaning they have taste buds and stomachs which allows them to digest food.
Do Cars in the movie Cars reproduce?
Think about it! There are no children in the world of Cars. There are vehicles who are older or younger than other each other, but there is no evidence of there ever being infant Cars that grow up in adult vehicles. That means Cars apparently don't reproduce the way humans do.
How do the cars in the Cars movie reproduce?
There are vehicles who are older or younger than other each other, but there is no evidence of there ever being infant Cars that grow up in adult vehicles. That means Cars apparently don't reproduce the way humans do. But even knowing that's a possibility, there's still no explanation of how Cars are born.
Are the cars in Cars bugs?
The Vroomaroundus Bugus is a literal interpretation of the Volkswagen Beetle, the car the insect appears to be based on. While the first Cars film portrayed all VW Bugs as literal insects, the sequel for some reason retconned this so that there are also "human" VW Bugs instead.
How do the cars in Cars eat?
To be fair, we did see one car eat something that was actual food at one point. In Cars _2_ Mater takes a big helping of what he thinks is pistachio ice cream. It's actually wasabi, and he eats it by just sticking out his tongue and licking it up.
Are the Cars in Cars actually Cars?
One of the most effective ways that Cars connects to the world of racing and and cars in general is through its characters. Each of these anthropomorphic automobiles is based upon an actual car model, with designs and personalities that often reflect their real-life counterpart.
What is inside the Cars in Cars?
"More specifically, there actually are human beings inside the cars, and are the source of the car's personality, intelligence, everything. The mechanical car is just the external body of these human-derived creatures," Torchinsky adds.
How are the cars in Cars alive?
There is evidence to prove that they are biologically alive. First, they have tongues, which allows them to eat, drink, and talk. Cars 2 had Mater eat wasabi thinking it was pistachio ice cream, meaning they have taste buds and stomachs which allows them to digest food.
Are the cars from Cars Bugs?
While the first Cars film portrayed all VW Bugs as literal insects, the sequel for some reason retconned this so that there are also "human" VW Bugs instead. It also featured "animal" planes and trains, but we have yet to see "human" farm and construction equipment.
How do the cars give birth in Cars?
After all, there are no baby vehicles in the Cars franchise. There are vehicles who are older or younger than other each other, but there is no evidence of there ever being infant Cars that grow up in adult vehicles. That means Cars apparently don't reproduce the way humans do.
How do they have babies in cars?
In fact there are no "baby" cars. But there's a scene where one of them says "by the Manufacturer" instead of "by God." I take that as evidence that they come from factories and are delivered by storks. Just a theory: Baby cars are built by doctors in the cars world.
How do the cars in Cars have babies?
After all, there are no baby vehicles in the Cars franchise. Think about it! There are vehicles who are older or younger than other each other, but there is no evidence of there ever being infant Cars that grow up in adult vehicles. That means Cars apparently don't reproduce the way humans do.
Do the Cars in Cars have parents?
Well technically cars don't have parents in the cars universe. They do have families though.