Home » This 1980 Trading Card Is The Only Mashup Of Citroën 2CVs And Victor Hugo Recorded In Modern Times

This 1980 Trading Card Is The Only Mashup Of Citroën 2CVs And Victor Hugo Recorded In Modern Times

Weirdwheels 2cv Top 2

The other day I asked if I was producing too much Citroën 2CV content for your tastes, and the consensus was, I’m happy to say, no, there seems to be a hunger for 2CV content, and I’m happy to provide that. While most of that content will revolve around my own humble and rattly 2CV, I figured I can get away with sharing some other 2CV content, like this bit, which I’m pretty sure is the only Citroën 2CV/trading card company/Victor Hugo mashup known in human artistic endeavors.

I’m talking about the 1980 Topps Chewing Gum trading card series known as Weird Wheels, which you can read more about in this excellent write-up here. Topps made all sorts of trading cards, including the expected baseball and other sporting cards, but also ventured into more lurid and artistic realms, making satirical cards with a nice, preteen goofball-friendly level of grossness like the famous Garbage Pail Kids cards, a parody of the Cabbage Patch Kids of the 1980s.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

The Weird Wheels line of cards from 1980 played on the artistic styles of 1960s and 1970s hot rod art, like the sort of thing Big Daddy Roth pioneered. This was a movement that was active, grotesque, vibrant, strange, exciting, unsettling, adolescent – and I mean all of these in the best way possible.

Cards: Topps, scan: https://andeverythingelsetoo.blogspot.com/2013/06/weird-wheels.html

The Weird Wheels line was a 55-card series, many painted by Norm Saunders, best known for his 1962 Mars Attacks cards that became something of a pop-cultural cult icon and, later, a bonkers 1996 Tim Burton movie. Saunders painted the Weird Wheels cards when he was well into his 70s and suffering from emphysema; his son once asked him why he continued to work, which prompted Norm to reply

“It’s fun! I gotta keep working. What the hell else am I gonna do?”

I get it, Norm.

I’ll likely revisit cards from this series again; for now, we’re going to look closer at the first in the series, known as the Hunchback of Notre Drag.

Weirdwheels 2cv Close

First, it’s very unusual for a Citroën 2CV to be featured in content like this; it just wasn’t one of the cars that usually got this sort of hot rod treatment. If there was going to be something small, foreign, and strange used in this context, that role was generally filled by a Volkswagen Beetle. So this is already something special.

Then there’s the literary tie-in, another unexpected element in this medium. To theme a French hot rod with a Hunchback of Notre Dame concept is pretty novel, but you can see how it fits. The hunchback, Quasimodo, is sort of an ideal stand-in for a Ratfink-type of character, being a sort of unsettling-looking antihero, and all of the surrounding aesthetics of Gothic architecture are a pretty rich vein to mine for hot rod details.

The 2CV on the card, named Li’l Ding Dong, referencing Quasimodo’s day job as bellringer, looks to be a pre-1961 car, as it has the rear-hinged front door and the older style grille. I’d guess the artist was using a late ’50s or 1960 2CV as a model, much like these:

Cs Coolscars 2cvs

The distinctive “ripple bonnet” has been cut open at the top to reveal, in place of an engine or blower or big intake, the bell tower of Notre-Dame cathedral, which is both clever and witty and, if you actually look at the cathedral’s towers, shows that the artist took the time to actually try and make something that resembled the real thing:

Weirdwheels 2cv Belltower

So, it looks like the diminutive flat-twin engine has been replaced with those bells in the tower, and, if I had to guess, I’d say the engine has been relocated to the rear, driving the rear wheels instead of the expected front wheels, because in classic hot rod style, there are some massive dragster wheels at the back and little pizza cutter wheels up front.

There’s also some great flame-belching exhausts, which, according to my interpretation of how I imagine this thing could be laid out mechanically, would be a pretty weird exhaust setup, extending forward from the engine, then turning to face backwards.

While looking into this and trying to remember just what the hell the plot of the book was (oh man is it complicated, and it’s also one of those plots that relies heavily on people just never asking each other what the hell they were doing) I learned that Victor Hugo would force himself to write and make deadlines by locking himself in his room without any actual, formal clothing, so he would be stuck in there until he finished.

I wanted to try a similar method, but the coffee shop I tried to write at is almost as bad as Trader Joe’s when it comes to how much they freak out about just trying to go about your business while naked. Prudes.

Top graphic images: Topps; DepositPhotos.com

 

 

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Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
1 month ago

Definitely makes me nostalgic for a time when childhood was analog; you actually possessed mostly real, not virtual, things. I can very clearly remember my own wacky packages collection, but not so much all the video games I played (remember the arcades though!)

It’s not 100% lost of course but every year it seems to head more the other way. And for the physical things that are left, the internet manages to do its best to ruin them – it’s sad that some stores have to keep trading cards locked up now.

RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
Member
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
1 month ago

“Li’l Ding Dong”

Fred Sanford: “Ya big dummy!”

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago

“if I had to guess, I’d say the engine has been relocated to the rear, driving the rear wheels instead of the expected front wheels, because in classic hot rod style”

Kinda like a Renault 5 turbo, non?

A. Barth
A. Barth
1 month ago

best known for his 1962 Mars Attacks cards

Ack ack ack ACK ack Ack? ACK ACK ACK ack ACK ack!

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
1 month ago
Reply to  A. Barth

It’s a cultural misunderstanding.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

The Doom Buggy, of course, brings to mind the VW-based dune buggies such as the Meyer Manx so naturally the next card, with the Dyno Saur, in that pic of the various cards, brings to mind the VW speed tuning shop, Deano Dyno-Soars, which built some seriously cool (& fast!) *purple* Beetles for the drag strip in the 1960s and ’70s; this is a replica of a typical Deano Dyno-Soar (most of the originals don’t seem to have survived, alas):
https://www.flat4.co.jp/vintage-car-collection/56deano
Surprising that Hanna-Barbera allowed them to do that with Dino from the Flintstones; guessing they weren’t as litigious as Rolls-Royce is nowadays about their grilles, lol.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago

“as litigious as Rolls-Royce is nowadays about their grilles”

Which, in the true spirit of the Empire they themselves ripped off from the Pantheon.

Gene
Gene
1 month ago

Gotta admit, an Autopian version of this, Editor owned cars, would make for great merch at $10.00 and under.

Just saying.

Rapgomi
Member
Rapgomi
1 month ago

I would love copies of the weird wheels cards – poster sized for my garage!

Last edited 1 month ago by Rapgomi
Ex-Exeo
Ex-Exeo
1 month ago

First, it’s very unusual for a Citroën 2CV to be featured in content like this; it just wasn’t one of the cars that usually got this sort of hot rod treatment.

Not in the traditional American sense, but the 2CV’s construction makes it unbelievably easy to modify – if you sawed the front off at the A pillar, it would probably be able to drive on its own. A quick picture search for “2CV modified” or “2CV hot rod” leads down a whole warren of rabbit holes.

The two 2CV fronts driven by nuns in the Superbug films from the 1970s got mentioned by Ariel Guzman in the comments to the Cocorico Monsieur Poulet article. They’re well worth mentioning again:

https://youtu.be/vVSsDfQ7xT0 (trailer containing all the interesting scenes, in German)
https://youtu.be/hznBVKanMGg (whole movie, in English)

Aaronaut
Member
Aaronaut
1 month ago

I mean, I think it is a conventional engine/exhaust layout, it’s just that this 2CV’s engine happens to be a bell tower. Normal stuff!

Canopysaurus
Member
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

This reminds me of my “Johnny Jet” Mani-Yack T-shirt transfer from the 60s. Don’t know if that was Ed Roth or not, but as I was also big into Rat Fink, it probably was.

BubbaX
BubbaX
1 month ago

In the context it was made, it would be “this 2 CV will beat your oxteam, even if it’s driven by the Master of the Sentences himself. Adjusted, maybe we all just zoom to St Peter’s….

EXL500
Member
EXL500
1 month ago

Other kids were Mickey Mouse kids. I was a Big Daddy Roth kid. (I’m 71.)

One of the many terrific experiences I had when I lived in NYC was to see Pee Wee Herman at Carnegie Hall. The curtain went up with both sides of the stage framed with enormous Rat Fink maquettes.

OrigamiSensei
Member
OrigamiSensei
1 month ago

I think the vibe of Randall the villain from the Pixar movie Monsters, Inc. may have borrowed from the upper right car in the backgrounded picture of the “Voo Doo Vette”.

Mouse
Mouse
1 month ago
Reply to  OrigamiSensei

I totally see it.

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
1 month ago

Naked in the coffee shop, writing about “Li’l Ding Dong.” Uhuh.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

Yeah, for some reason there was a surprising amount of interest in the Hunchback of Notre Dame in the USA in the 1960s & 70s. Saturday afternoon television programming often included the 1939 film with Charles Laughton & Maureen O’Hara and the 1956 film with Anthony Quinn & Gina Lollobrigida; less frequently they’d show the 1923 film with Lon Chaney. And people would be reminded of the Hunchback by the character Eye-gore in the 1974 film Young Frankenstein (“What hump?”)
The Hunchback was practically a staple in Mad Magazine in those days, especially with Don Martin.
So, yeah, it makes sense that in 1980 they’d choose the Hunchback for the hot-rodded 2CV…

Ex-Exeo
Ex-Exeo
1 month ago

Yeah, for some reason there was a surprising amount of interest in the Hunchback of Notre Dame in the USA in the 1960s & 70s.

I can think of two reasons. Both are literally connected to Gina Lollobrigida.

Dennis Ames
Member
Dennis Ames
1 month ago

Oh Boy, this reminds me of the “Wacky Packages” that we collected. They were styled like existing food packages and toyed with https://thefw.com/wacky-packages-surprising-cards/

CUlater
Member
CUlater
1 month ago
Reply to  Dennis Ames

Loved the wacky packages, still have them around here somewhere. I hope.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

Slightly apropos of which, coincidentally I actually had just read a short story published by the Irish writer William Maginn in 1821 about someone trapped in a bell tower; succinctly titled “The Man in the Bell” it’s kind of a horror or proto-horror, if you will, story that apparently was a bit of an inspiration for Edgar Allan Poe in writing his own story “The Pit and the Pendulum.”
https://books.google.com/books?id=tKIIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA144&dq=%22the+man+in+the+bell%22+maginn&as_brr=1&ei=9FRjS7_1D4-2M8HxkJoE&cd=7#v=onepage&q&f=false

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
1 month ago

…I now want to see a real A/Gas Deux Chaveaux.

Jonathan Hendry
Jonathan Hendry
1 month ago

I suspect the Hunchback is the only French character reference that would have been recognized by the target audience. Maybe the Musketeers.

The Sparkalator Connects To The Whirligig
Member
The Sparkalator Connects To The Whirligig
1 month ago

The 2CV is clearly RWD at this point. But look at the Rabbit! They stuck hard to that car being FWD, which was somewhat distinctive at the time, I suppose. I kind of wonder if 2CVs, being old cars that weren’t really sold in the US, were not remembered as being FWD and the standard rat rod aesthetic prevailed. The Rabbit is hilarious despite its lack of literary references.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
1 month ago

Any count the lug nuts? If there’s 4 or 5 per wheel it could be a 2CV body on a VW pan.

Martin Ibert
Member
Martin Ibert
1 month ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

Count’em. There are zero visible bolts or nuts.

MaximillianMeen
Member
MaximillianMeen
1 month ago

Oh, man, taking me back, Torch! I recall collecting the Odd Rod sticker cards, of similar ilk, way back in the 70’s.

Hotdoughnutsnow
Hotdoughnutsnow
1 month ago

I am fairly certain that I owned this card. I spent much of algebra I doodling these types of cars in the margins of my notebook, and barely passing the class. Lots of flames, smoke, wheelie bars, and engines with giant blowers.

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
1 month ago

Maybe referencing the 4×4 Sahara two engines, with the 2 heads painted on the rear fender?

Dan Hull
Dan Hull
1 month ago

You can see his foot through the side window… I don’t think this is rear-engined so much as “all engined” from the bottom edge of the windows down, and he’s literally sitting on top of it.

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