Hot Paint Job

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The common motif of adding artificial flames to things so they'll seem more Badass. This is common in Real Life, especially pertaining to muscle cars (the idea being that the car is so fast, it literally burns as it goes), but there probably isn't a single thing on the planet that hasn't had fire painted on it at some point or another in an attempt to increase its cool factor. In fiction, the possibilities are broader, as detailed below. "Go faster stripes" are a similar phenomenon.

Not to be confused with the Incendiary Exponent, when something is actually on fire.

See also Tron Lines, a Power Glows counterpart.

Examples of Hot Paint Job include:

Anime and Manga


Film

  • In Michael Bay's Transformers films, Optimus Prime has red flames painted on his blue chassis, letting him keep the iconic red-chest-windows look.
    • This wasn't the first time Prime had flame detailing—his popular Generation 2 Laser Optimus Prime toy featured smoldering details on the front and a giant portrait of Prime wielding a flamethrower on the sides.
  • Subverted in Gran Torino where Thao Vang Lor gets the titular car on the condition that he doesn't "paint any idiotic flames on it like some white trash hillbilly..."
  • It´s Greased Lightnin'!


Literature

  • Harry Wayne, one of Eddie Valiant's poker buddies in Who Censored Roger Rabbit??, is a mechanic who decorated his Chevy with two "flaming belches" he bought from a Toon dragon.
  • Katniss of The Hunger Games. This is intentional from the get-go, as her design team gives her a fire theme and coins the catchphrase "Girl on Fire". The flame motif continues through the trilogy. Fandom loves playing this up.


Live Action TV

Tory: You know what would make this car more awesome? Flames! 'Cuz everybody knows that cars with flames are more awesome!

  • Alton's stand mixer in Good Eats has flames painted on it.
  • One episode of 3rd Rock from the Sun had Dick and Mary get into an escalating prank war; Dick took advantage of the fact that he spoke Spanish and Mary didn't to tell her mechanic that she wanted a complete overhaul, including flame paintjob and horn that plays "La Cucaracha". We sadly don't get to see the results, just the look of abject horror on Mary's face when her car returns.
  • Kamen Rider Fourze's Fire States has flame art on parts of his armor. There's also some on his schoolbag and shoes.


Music

  • Count how many rock musicians (especially drummers) decorate their instruments with this. This is even a part of the decoration options for drummers in Rock Band.


Toys

  • Tahu and Ackar of Bionicle both wield swords shaped like flames (or just swords with flame designs in the case of Tahu's Nuva upgrade), and Ackar also sports a flame-design helmet.


Video Games

  • Bowser's monster truck in Mario Kart: Double Dash!!, the "Koopa King", has some flames painted on the back. Add six tires with studded rims for the full-throttle Badass effect. The "Flame Flyer", a heavyweight kart in Mario Kart Wii, is an even better example.
  • The leopard jeans from No More Heroes are dark blue and have flames embroidered on the side. Their item description says this:

Everyone knows adding flames to something makes it cooler.


Western Animation

Cubert: I'm twelve.

Bloo: I don't even know you anymore.
Mac: Shut up. At least the bunnies are on fire.


Real Life

  • In Real Life, some people who are particularly obsessed with their cars add decals on them, and they almost always involve flames or some other flame-like design. (See this awesomeness [dead link]). But it could possibly be subverted; there are some cars that are so "uncool" that adding flames just makes it look corny. Kind of like multiplying one negative number.