Lexus "Minority Report" Off-System Sports Car --
Model Year: 2054

For Immediate Release


(06/18/2002) 

Specifications 
  Engine: Smart recharging electric engine 
  Kilowatts: 500 
  Wheelbase: 106 in. 
  Length: 146 in. 
  Width: 82 in. 
  Curb Weight: 2300 lbs. 
  Chassis: Carbon Fiber & Titanium Composite Monocoque 
  Suspension: Titanium Composite, Fully-Independent Double-Wishbone with Adaptive 
  Variable Suspension (AVS), Speed-Sensitive Automatic Height Control (AHC) 
  Brakes: Computer-Controlled, Servo/Electronic, Ceramic Hybrid Discs, and Regenerative 
  Electric System to charge all Systems. 
  Wheels and Tires: 6-Spoke, Titanium Alloy, C-TEK Wheels, 22x9.5-inch with 285/30R22, 
  High-Speed Run-Flat Tires 

  Features 
Heads-Up instrumentation with Night Vision and Organic Recognition capability 

Color-impregnated, carbon composite body panels with dent-resistant memory 

Body conforming bucket seats with automatic heating and cooling functions 
Laser Guided Cruise Control 
Stereolithography formed body panels 
Body panels color selectable by owner voice recognition 
All systems fully computer-controlled with Voice-Activated and 
  Gesture-Recognition capability 
All rearward vision via cameras rather than mirrors 
Sonar Parking Assist 
Switchable-tint glass all-around with solar panel glass in roof 
Retractable solar body panels for recharging and interior climate control during 
  parking 
Information system display doubles as owner-recognizable personal computer 

DNA Recognition Entry and Ignition System: Via sensory intelligence, the system 
  allows owner to enter and start vehicle. 
Accident Avoidance System: Infrared technology senses what's ahead to warn 
  of impending danger. Sonar parking assist and rearward vision cameras. Dent 
  resistant memory metal protects exterior from dents and/or scratches. 
Self-Diagnosis System: Car automatically detects and alerts any mechanical 
  or electrical problems. Voice-Activated Concierge Service will schedule necessary 
  service appointments. A Lexus representative will travel to ownerās preferred 
  location to service the car. 
Auto Valet: Once the car drops the owner off, it then parks to recharge (its 
  retractable solar body panels automatically adjust to accommodate recharging). 
  Upon remote command, the car will arrive at requested location. 
Global Digital Entertainment System (with Universal Translator and Personal 
  Digital Recorder): Comprehensive music library, archived with a global directory; 
  updates daily via cyber connection. The PDR automatically records shows via 
  request (similar to TiVo today). The system alerts to breaking news, weather, 
  stock, and/or sports reports based on personal profile data. 
Voice-Activated Concierge Service (with Internet Search): Reserves restaurant, 
  hotel and entertainment events via voice command. 
  Weather Sensitive Response System: Solar panel triggers automatic window tint, 
  adjusting the level of bright light to the driver's sensitivity. Tire traction 
  adjusts automatically to road conditions. 
  # # #



# # #
Contact: 
Lexus Public Relations

A Far-Out Future Isn't So Far Off - The Making of Lexus Vehicles for "Minority Report"

For Immediate Release


(06/18/2002) 

BACKGROUNDER

In the year 2054, some cars will be self-cleaning, some will drive in an accident 
  free system, and some will change colors on command.
At least that's the vision of the future in Steven Spielberg's upcoming film 
  "Minority Report," starring Tom Cruise. The film, based on a short 
  story by science fiction writer Philip K. Dick, is an action-detective thriller 
  set in Washington, D.C. in 2054, where police utilize a psychic technology to 
  arrest and convict murderers before they commit their crime. Tom Cruise plays 
  the head of this precrime unit and is himself accused of the future murder of 
  a man he hasn't even met.
When it came time to conceptualize automotive transportation for the futuristic 
  setting, Spielberg turned to Lexus as a potential partner. "I've been driving 
  a Lexus SUV," Spielberg said. "And I thought Lexus might be interested 
  in going into a speculative future to see what the transportation systems and 
  cars would look like on our highways in 50 years. The result of that exploration 
  is something that elevates and transforms driving into an environmental experience."
Imagining the Future
Conceptualizing and creating the film's 2054 setting - including its transportation 
  systems - began nearly three years ago. From the outset, Spielberg wasn't interested 
  in creating a fantastical science fiction film but, rather, a future reality 
  film. The first step was to call together a diverse team of designers and futurists 
  to speculate on what the year 2054 might actually look like. Among the participants 
  were conceptual artist Harald Belker and representatives from Calty, the Toyota/Lexus 
  design studio in Southern California.
Discussions were wide-ranging and included topics such as the future of medical 
  advancements, social theories, defense issues, advertising, infrastructure, 
  technology, workplace and household appliances, and of course, cars. There was 
  talk of new inventions, including iris colorants, anti-boredom gelcaps, additional 
  alphabet letters, spray meat, and magnetic levitation transportation systems.
These early sessions would inform much of the design of the futuristic world 
  of "Minority Report." Belker - whose film credits include "Batman 
  & Robin," "Inspector Gadget" and "Armageddon" ö 
  was commissioned to design the film's vehicles, including cars for a vast urban 
  magnetic levitation (MAG-LEV) system, as well as an individual off-system car 
  for driving outside the city. Lexus provided design and luxury cues for the 
  cars, and gave Belker the lowdown on advanced interior technology. "That 
  sophisticated, forward thinking for cars is really a hallmark of Lexus," 
  says Belker.
The MAG-LEV System
In the film's design for its Washington, DC setting circa 2054, a mass transportation 
  system uses electrical/magnetic energy - much like that which sends a bullet 
  train speeding along - with horizontal and vertical surfaces covered with "roadways" 
  made of magnetic discs that support and propel various vehicles. In this accident-free, 
  computer-controlled system, vehicles move at speeds of 80 to 100 miles per hour. 
  In the city's transportation layout, private pods, taxis and multi-passenger 
  cars all negotiate the MAG-LEV system. As cars travel, they make seamless transitions 
  between vertical and horizontal surfaces.
"We discussed how a future goal will be individual transportation within 
  a mass transport system," says Belker. "The discussion gravitated 
  from traveling in personal cabins, into the direction of a futuristic car which 
  works on a MAG-LEV system ö something between a capsule and a car."
The result is a car which travels up an apartment building, for example, to 
  "dock" at a person's residence. Once there, a door slides open that 
  doubles as a living room window; at that point, the carās seats can even 
  provide additional seating in the living room. While parked, the car performs 
  maintenance checks, auto-repairs, recharges and self cleans.
When residents enter their car to depart back onto the system, they are essentially 
  stepping from the living room into another room of the house. In fact, inside 
  the car, the seats and furnishings bear more relation to a room environment 
  than a car. Highly-styled, comfortable seats conform to individual bodies; seating 
  configurations can be changed so passengers can face forward or each other. 
  The entire environment lends itself to a video screen which allows the "driver" 
  to perform a multitude of functions. . .none of which has to do with driving.
The Off-System Sports Car
For scenes calling for Cruise's character to drive outside the city limits, 
  a radical red off-system sports car was designed and tailor-built to fit the 
  star. While this car isn't likely to be on Lexus showroom floors in 2054, the 
  red Lexus sports coupe is more similar to present-day vehicles-featuring the 
  familiar four wheels and designed to be driven on a traditional road system. 
  In designing the sports car, Belker says, "the goal was to create something 
  unlike anything seen before, and really give it the 'WOW!' effect. We set out 
  to have a lot of fun with it for a big bang impact."
In the end, this futuristic Lexus - designed as a high-performance, two-seat 
  personal sports car - flexes a muscular design with the ultimate in cab-forward 
  seating; a low, enclosed wheelbase for sportiness; aggressive lines, and proportions 
  so unexpected that, at first glance, it's not entirely evident which end is 
  the front and which is the rear.
Conceptually, this sports car features an electric engine, heads-up instrumentation 
  with night vision and organic recognition capability, color-selectable body 
  panels (changeable with a simple owner voice command), DNA recognition entry 
  and ignition system, and auto valet - a feature that allows the car to drop 
  the owner off at a desired location, park itself for recharging, and arrive 
  for owner pick-up at the commanded location.
Making the cars. . .from abstract to "action!"
Once the vehicle needs for the film were identified, Belker started sketching, 
  creating fairly tight illustrations which would first be presented to production 
  designer Alex McDowell ("Fight Club," "The Crow") and then, 
  Spielberg. Spielberg would provide his input, make suggestions and modifications, 
  and Belker would incorporate his notes in a fresh design.
From the approved sketches and renderings, Belker and his staff built 3-D models, 
  pacing themselves quickly to meet deadlines. Being handed several sketches of 
  different pieces each morning - such as knobs, seats, wheels, windshields - 
  Belker's designers would model through the afternoon. By the next day they would 
  ship out the model and e-mail the blueprint of another piece to CTEK, the Santa 
  Ana, California-based technology design and development firm chosen to construct 
  the cars.
Of course, Belker says, part of the process was picking out features like fabric 
  and colors. "Since Lexus is all about luxury and comfort, we had to meet 
  those standards as well. . . although sometimes in movie cars, itās more 
  about the look than the actual cushiness."
When the designs got to CTEK, the engineering department would sort out demands 
  for such facets as metal and electrical components. Then, when the 3-D models 
  were turned in, CTEK would build the vehicles to full-size specifications.
Each vehicle had certain requirements. In the case of the red off-system sports 
  car, it had to be fully-electric and maintain 70 miles per hour for stretches 
  of time. Even though, in automotive parlance, that car was deemed a "concept 
  car," it had to be functional: doors had to open, the steering wheel had 
  to tilt, seats had to recline. And of course, to reach top velocity and perform 
  on-screen as well as it does, the coupe - powered by 47 batteries and an all-electric 
  motor - required an intact four speed standard shift with reverse. Post-production 
  computer-generated special effects create the coupe's futuristic instrumentation, 
  including a "heads-up display" (an on-windshield projection providing 
  a clear view of controls and gauges a driver would typically have to look down 
  for).
For the MAG-LEV vehicle, rotating pods substitute for wheels. Swiveling seats 
  were installed to enable driving from either end. The vehicle has a full-glass 
  roof, which is on prominent display during some chase scenes, and doors that, 
  similar to sliding glass doors, open from the center to allow the occupant to 
  step out. In the film, Cruise's MAG-LEV is a jade green with tinted glass on 
  the sides as well as the roof. As with the coupe, the heads-up display images 
  are also computer generated in this model.
In the case of both cars, luxurious touches were added inside with wood grain 
  paneling, leather wrapped interiors, and glistening screens.
In all, these two vehicles - along with a dozen other background vehicles - 
  were created from sketch to completion in about two months to become the fully-appointed, 
  fully-functional Lexus road-stars of "Minority Report."
As "Minority Report" premieres, Belker reflects on his work on this 
  "dream project." "I regard this movie as the 'Blade Runner' for 
  my generation, so I would have given anything to work on it. And then, on top 
  of that, having Lexus' involvement ensured everything came together perfectly 
  during the different phases of exterior and interior design and construction. 
  They're an ideal partner."


# # #
Contact: 
Lexus Public Relations















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