Rent Cars 3 (2017)

3.2 of 5 from 329 ratings
1h 38min
Rent Cars 3 Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
  • General info
  • Available formats
Synopsis:
Blindsided by a new generation of blazing-fast racers led by arrogant hotshot Jackson Storm, the legendary Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) is suddenly sidelined and pushed from the sport he loves. To get back on track, he'll need the help of eager young racing technician Cruz Ramirez, inspiration from the late Fabulous Hudson Hornet and a few unexpected twists and turns of fate.
Directors:
Producers:
Kevin Reher
Voiced By:
Owen Wilson, Cristela Alonzo, Chris Cooper, Nathan Fillion, Larry the Cable Guy, Armie Hammer, Ray Magliozzi, Tony Shalhoub, Bonnie Hunt, Lea Delaria, Kerry Washington, Bob Costas, Margo Martindale, Darrell Waltrip, Isiah Whitlock Jr., Bob Peterson, Guido Quaroni, Tom Magliozzi, John Ratzenberger, Kyle Petty
Writers:
Brian Fee, Ben Queen, Eyal Podell, Jonathon E. Stewart, Kiel Murray, Bob Peterson, Mike Rich
Studio:
Walt Disney
Genres:
Anime & Animation, Children & Family
Collections:
A Brief History of Motor Racing Films, Films & TV by topic, Films to Watch if You Like Toy Story, A Brief History of Film...
BBFC:
Release Date:
13/11/2017
Run Time:
98 minutes
Languages:
English Audio Description Dolby Digital 2.0, English Dolby Digital 5.1, Italian Dolby Digital 5.1, Turkish Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing, Italian, Turkish
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.39:1
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Lou
  • Miss Fritter's Racing Skoool
  • Audio Commentary with Director Brian Fee, Producer Kevin Reher, Co-Producer Andrea Warren, and 'Cars' Franchise Creative Director Jay Ward
BBFC:
Release Date:
13/11/2017
Run Time:
103 minutes
Languages:
English Audio Description Dolby Digital 2.0, English DTS-HD High Resolution 5.1, English DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1, Greek Dolby Digital 5.1, Hindi Dolby Digital 5.1, Polish DTS 5.1
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing, Greek, Polish
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.39:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
(0) All
Bonus:
  • Lou
  • Miss Fritter's Racing Skoool
  • Ready for the Race
  • Cruz Ramirez: The Yellow Car That Could
  • Audio Commentary with Director Brian Fee, Producer Kevin Reher, Co-Producer Andrea Warren, And Cars Franchise Creative Director Jay Ward
BBFC:
Release Date:
13/11/2017
Run Time:
103 minutes
Languages:
Castilian Spanish DTS 5.1, Catalan DTS 5.1, English Audio Description Dolby Digital 2.0, English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1, English DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1, Hindi Dolby Digital 5.1, Polish DTS 5.1
Subtitles:
Castillian, English Hard of Hearing, Polish
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.39:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
(0) All
Bonus:
  • Lou
BBFC:
Release Date:
Unknown
Run Time:
102 minutes
Languages:
English Audio Description Dolby Digital 2.0, English Dolby Atmos, English Dolby Digital 5.1, English Dolby Digital Plus 7.1, Latin American Spanish Dolby Digital Plus 7.1
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing, Latin American Spanish
DVD Regions:
Region 0 (All)
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.39:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
(0) All

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Reviews (2) of Cars 3

What was the point?! - Cars 3 review by CS

Spoiler Alert
16/12/2017

The first two films in this trilogy were brilliant and a well deserved success. This third in the series though has clearly lost its way and rather than being a film about the main character, becomes yet another yawn fest catering to the PC crowd! I found the film very slow to develop and kept losing my attention. The plot is paper thin and very predictable and I worked out what was going to happen as soon as the new main character appeared. The first half is very slow and centres on Lightning McQueen's fading career as younger newer models superseded him. Trying to make parallels with real life and failing miserably. Until Cruz Ramirez, a female version of himself, comes onto the scene and he is inspired to work with her. This comes across as less inspirational and more about girl power and pandering to the feminist brigade, than it does about being yourself and believing that you can overcome obstacles! Sadly the ending gives the impression that the real purpose of this plot is to set up for a new series featuring a female version of McQueen in the guise of Ramirez. It's really annoying that nowadays every big blockbuster simply has to set itself up for the next instalment instead of simply being a good film in itself, so in the end this comes across more like a Marvel comic book than a solid film in its own right. Even the kids said it was boring, so that's saying something!

0 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

Kids will like it. - Cars 3 review by NC

Spoiler Alert
28/01/2018

Should have left it as the 2 films. Pixar can do better........maybe should go back to the toaster and angle poise again?

0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.

Critic review

Cars 3 review by Mark McPherson - Cinema Paradiso

As the last movie in the Cars trilogy, I hope, the series finds itself going out with a disappointed sigh of a sports drama. I’ve seen this story repeated not only in a countless array of sports pictures, but even within this very franchise. It’s not that there isn’t some heart or character to this familiar tale, which takes aim at such emotional subjects of getting old, passing the torch and female empowerment. But considering how long Pixar has stuck with this series, they haven’t attained the character to make me care about these cars, nor the building of this world to make me not question it.

I was usually distracted enough by the story and creativity of past Cars movies to never read too much into this world and drive myself insane. This is not the case with Cars 3 as it addresses a subject that is never fully explained. Hotshot racer Lightning McQueen (Owen Wilson) finds himself more alone than ever on the track. His mentor of Doc Hudson (Paul Newman) has passed away, but how? Where do cars go when their meter runs out? Do they proceed to a funeral home style junkyard or have their parts donated? Anyway, McQueen soon discovers that a new generation of slick racers are overtaking his old racing buddies. Competitors he once made cheerful jabs at are now retiring because they can’t keep with these new kids and their fancy new parts.

But, wait, where did these new racers come from? If they have fancy new parts, why can’t McQueen replace his own? This is apparently some unspoken aspect of the Cars world that automobiles are built with what they have for life. I hate to keep harping on this, but these are really very basic questions that the usually detail oriented Pixar studio asks and answers so we don’t have to. They need to be smarter so I don’t find myself looking at the cow tractors and try to fathom whether they use them to eat for their parts or milk them for oil. Even Blue Sky’s Robots, as manic and ridiculous as it was, still found a clever way to explain birth and death with inorganic life.

Since replacement parts are out of the question for an unexplained reason, McQueen finds himself with a new sponsor (Nathan Fillion) willing to train him. Yes, if a car isn’t fast enough or precise enough on the track, it’s all a matter of working out. This is a typical route for a sports movie, but in a world of cars? How important is it for a car to have meditation and workout on a treadmill?

If you can glaze over all these ill thought concepts, there’s a decent mentor arc here. McQueen is trained by Cruz, a perky trainer that knows everything about simulations and not much about racing outside of a gym. As McQueen takes Cruz out for some good old fashioned racing, he finds himself spending more time helping out Cruz than flexing his tires. You can see where this is going, especially in a scene where Cruz tearfully admits she never wanted to be a trainer and had dreams of becoming a racer. Her arc has a satisfying conclusion, but a little forced towards the climax which makes a statement so direct and overly sentimental it comes off as pandering. A great animated film can find a way to weave allegories, not smash them over the viewer’s head once all the hijinks are over.

The film is incredibly off in tone for, again, not defining its world very well. The moment where McQueen has a major crash on the track early in the film is the most shocking and tragic of scenes. But when McQueen later attends a demolition derby for training, where dozens of cars are smashed and disfigured, it’s treated more as a comical skirmish. Shouldn’t there be some danger and terror to such a scene? This makes the big opponent of this competition, a school bus with piercings and devil horns, seem more playful than tough. We’re supposed to like her, even though she rips off license plates to dangle off her windows. We’re supposed to hate McQueen’s rival of Jackson Storm (Armie Hammer) as the new punk on the scene who insults the old guard at every turn. But, wait, wasn’t McQueen the exact same way in the first movie? Couldn’t Jackson be taken under the wing of McQueen towards the end of the picture? Nope, he’s just a bad guy we’re supposed to hate and won’t develop anymore past being a jerk.

If Cars 3 was intended to be a farewell, it’s no Toy Story 3. The familiar cast of characters I suppose we’re meant to feel sentimental towards, from the buck-toothed Mater (Larry The Cable Guy) to the big rig Mack (John Ratzenberger), are mostly shoved to the side. McQueen’s journey to be a better racer finds him spending more time lamenting on the past than improving his future, to an almost depressing degree that only the most aged of audiences will be able to relate towards. And the humor, the most vindicating aspect of any animated film, is comprised almost entirely of car puns that should have been retired for this series. Pixar is too good of a studio to play it safe with their pictures and Cars 3 has strapped on the training wheels usually reserved for Dreamworks or Illumination. For a franchise that’s been around for eleven years, the rust has shown and the gas is reaching empty. The studio needs to retire this series, less it becomes the biggest crash and burn of the studio’s generally pristine legacy.

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