Abarth 500e Ties Itself With Hollywood

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Collabs between car companies and the movie industry are nearly as old as the automobile itself; witness the innumerable tie-ups which have zipped their way across the silver screen. This year, Fiat is drumming up interest in its new Abarth 500e by attaching itself to the Mission: Impossible franchise.


Filmgoers who choose to spend a few bucks to see Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning, Part One will see a chase sequence in which Tom Cruise belts around the streets of Rome in a vintage ‘60s-era 500 Abarth. Seizing on this opportunity, the Italian brand plans to show off its upcoming all-electric Abarth 500e in conjunction with the movie. In other words, you know the so-called ‘hero color’ for this thing will be a shade of yellow very similar to the one that’ll show up on cinema screens in a couple of weeks.

As for the car itself, Fiat says it features a 113.7-kW (150ish horsepower) electric motor and a 42-kWh lithium-ion battery underneath its instantly recognizable shape. It marks the first time Abarth has gone electric since the last electron-powered 500 was badged as a workaday Fiat. Buff books and other outlets across the pond have been reporting this car has a trio of driving modes, some of which unlock more power than others. Anyone pining for an Abarth soundtrack can apparently switch on a sound generator to produce an artificial racket.

Whether the model will reach American shores in an effort to bolster the thin lineup in Fiat showrooms on this side of the pond is unclear. However, it wouldn’t make a lot of sense for the company to go through all this effort and shack up with a movie that’ll do big numbers in America if they have no intention to sell it here. But stranger things have happened.

Those of you with long memories will remember the late Sergio Marchionne, when asked by a Reuters reporter about the old 500e hatchback, famously said: “I hope you don’t buy it, because every time I sell one it costs me $14,000.” The man was nothing if not honest.


We wonder what he'd say about this one.


[Images: Fiat]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later on Jul 05, 2023

    "Sergio Marchionne, when asked by a Reuters reporter about the old 500e hatchback, famously said: “I hope you don’t buy it, because every time I sell one it costs me $14,000.” The man was nothing if not honest."


    The late, great Sergio on this 500e: Please don't buy it, because every time I sell one it costs me $24,000.

    • You need a rear swaybar and wheels. Stock it plows like a killdozer with it's little stock pizza cutter front rims. After that it's as tossable as any Abarth I've driven but with better weight balance. It fits 15 inch rims so plenty of good tires available



  • Marques Marques on Nov 06, 2023

    I have a Rosso 2012 Fiat 500 Abarth(5-speed manual)that still brings a grin to my face-11 years and 65 K miles later. The car has relatively reliable scheduled maintenance aside.

  • MaintenanceCosts (1) Crash program to redesign all of the interiors, now, to banish all evidence of cost-cutting and have at least as much flash as current Mercedes.(2) XT6 gets the 3.0T engine. Both XT6 and XT5 get an Acura-style AWD system that will make them stop feeling so much like front-drivers.(3) XT6, XT5, and CT5 all get a restyle along the lines of the '89 restyle of the DeVille and co. - that is, add length even with overhang if you have to, add swagger, add fancy.(4) New platform for large unibody SUVs, either electric or hybrid, to compete straight across with the top two Range Rover models. If they are going to be a real luxury brand they need SUVs more refined than the Escalade. Keep selling the Escalade alongside the new ones for the existing cigarette-boat audience.(5) XT4 and CT4 get put out of their misery, or maybe brought back as Buicks.
  • Jkross22 Cadillac - We took over the sport sedan market (what's left of it) from BMW. Oh and we also have this Escalade that everyone loves and this EV that looks like Peugeot designed it.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X I would only buy with manual. Even if the auto is repaired, it will most likely fail again. Just a bad design.
  • Fed65767768 This is a good buy despite the mods, as unlike most Focii this old there's little rust.
  • Ashley My father had a '69 Malibu that I took cross-country with a lot of detour on the way back. It was OK, but nothing spectacular, and after I got back he had nothing but trouble with it until it finally died in 1974. I had a Malibu rental in 2003 and at one point parked it next to a restored '69 in a shopping center parking lot in Redding, CA. I imagine the two of them had lots to discuss while we were eating at the restaurant inside.
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