Also, I always liked the look of these Monzas, this one from 1975, which sort of fit in the same general category of American hatchbacks like the Pinto and the Pacer; they all shared some odd proportions and detail choices from the rear, and I kinda like them: wide butts, rectangular taillights, clean lines, minimal detail, big windows–you get it. I also really like some of the other details of the car that were chosen to be highlighted in the brochure:

Those rectangular headlights, of course, which were hot shit in 1975, and, yes, this was the first time Chevy (well, in America, at least) attempted to deliver four of them per car. Could Americans handle it? We just didn’t know, but we did know those rubber impact strips were cushiony.

Honestly, making a point that cabin air “exits through a new place for American cars” is just kinda weird. Were Americans clamoring for new places for their air to exit?

So the steering wheel is “a nifty size?” Oh, okay, thanks for that, nifty steering wheel sizing was at the very top of my list of requirements for a new car. I may have settled for a keen-sized or even neat-sized wheel, but I’m glad I won’t have to.

Cold Start  Meet Chevy s First Quad Rectangular Headlight Car  The Monza 2 2 - 63Cold Start  Meet Chevy s First Quad Rectangular Headlight Car  The Monza 2 2 - 64Cold Start  Meet Chevy s First Quad Rectangular Headlight Car  The Monza 2 2 - 26Cold Start  Meet Chevy s First Quad Rectangular Headlight Car  The Monza 2 2 - 27