Difference between revisions of "Lil' Bandit"
(→Behind the Laughter: Added why Lil' Bandit is a Charger in Hit & Run) |
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== Appearances == | == Appearances == | ||
+ | * {{Ep|Separate Vocations}} | ||
+ | * {{Ep|22 Short Films About Springfield}} | ||
* {{Ep|Realty Bites}} | * {{Ep|Realty Bites}} | ||
* {{ep|To Surveil With Love|([[Opening Sequence]])}} | * {{ep|To Surveil With Love|([[Opening Sequence]])}} |
Revision as of 15:06, July 13, 2010
Lil' Bandit |
Vehicle Information
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Lil' Bandit was Snake Jailbird's car.
History
The Springfield Police are holding a police seized-property auction, and Snake discovers to his horror that his car is one of the lots. He vows to kill whoever buys the car, which turns out to be Homer Simpson. Snake treated it well and tuned it for high performance, but Homer runs it all over the road and fills it with Regular Petrol instead of Premium. After setting some traps to kill Homer and get his car back (which only serve to maim Kirk Van Houten), Snake gets the jump on Homer and they brawl on the hood of the car. It crashes into a large house, injuring them both.
Model
Lil' Bandit is a 1968 Pontiac Firebird, souped up to become a Hot rod. The license plate said GR8 68.
Behind the Laughter
In The Simpsons Road Rage and The Simpsons Hit & Run, the car is modelled after a 1969 Dodge Charger: this is evident by the hideaway headlights, long rear end, split grill and overall "General Lee" look, like his car in Separate Vocations, rather than Lil' Bandit as it appeared in Realty Bites. In Hit & Run, once Snake's bonus mission is beaten the car is unlocked for the player.
Appearances
- Episode – "Separate Vocations"
- Episode – "22 Short Films About Springfield"
- Episode – "Realty Bites"
- Episode – "To Surveil With Love" (Opening Sequence)
- Video game – The Simpsons Road Rage
- Video game – The Simpsons: Hit and Run
External links