Maranello, you blazing barn of botched ambition. Ferrari, the house that Enzo built on a foundation of roaring pistons and sacred testosterone, has unleashed what can only be described as an electric eunuch: the ‘Luce.’ This Chinese-market EV, named after a word that suggests luminosity but delivers all the dazzle of a damp firework, has ignited a firestorm of backlash. The Chinese, who allegedly have a word for everything, seem to have no word for ‘gratitude’ for this plastic-and-promises trinket. But let’s be clear: the real victim here is good taste, and British automotive industry is already circling like a flock of tweed-clad vultures over a dead battery.
Let’s dissect this atrocity, shall we? The ‘Luce’ is Ferrari’s first fully electric vehicle, a four-door coupe that looks like a melted Maserati grafted onto a silicon chip. It’s built in China, for China, because nothing says ‘Italian passion’ like a vehicle assembled in Shenzhen by robots named ‘Wang.’ The backlash is as swift as it is deserved: Chinese netizens, never shy with their cyber-torches, have decried the design as ‘soulless,’ ‘overpriced,’ and ‘a betrayal of the prancing horse.’ One commenter described it as ‘a luxury toaster with a Ferrari badge,’ which is frankly an insult to toasters everywhere.
Enter the British automotive industry, the plucky underdog that’s been nursing a pint and a grudge since Brexit. While Ferrari fumbles with its Chinese flop, British marques from Aston Martin to Lotus are sharpening their pencils and their electric drivetrains. Lotus, recently resurrected like Lazarus on a diet of Chinese cash (yes, irony noted), has debuted the Eletre, an SUV that actually looks like a car and not a rejected concept from a PS3 game. Aston Martin has its Valhalla, a hybrid hypercar that might actually make you forget the DBX’s aesthetic crimes. Even Morris Garages, yes MG, is churning out electric vehicles that don’t make you weep for the combustion engine.
The irony is thicker than the smog over Beijing. Ferrari, the bastion of exclusivity, is now making a car for the masses in a market where they’re already a niche. Meanwhile, British manufacturers, long accused of being stuck in the mud of tradition, are embracing electrification with the grim determination of a pub landlord installing a fruit machine. The ‘Luce’ is priced at a laughable £200,000 equivalent, a sum that could buy you a fleet of Mini Electrics and a lifetime supply of ‘Marmite.’ For the same money, you could have a Mercedes EQS and still afford a decent gin if you drank it in the back seat while weeping for the planet.
But let’s not pretend the British are perfect. The MG Cyberster, a retro-styled electric roadster, looks like a replica of a kit car built in a shed in Slough. And JLR’s electric Range Rover has more delays than a British rail timetable. Yet there’s a certain scrappy charm in their fumbles, a sense of endeavour that Ferrari has traded for a Chinese cheque. The ‘Luce’ incident is a cautionary tale, a parable about selling out faster than a politician at a casino. Britain, with its cobbled roads and rainy sunsets, may not produce the flashiest EVs, but they have something Ferrari forgot: a soul, or at least the memory of one. So raise a glass, British automotive industry. Your moment to capitalise has arrived, but only if you don’t produce a toaster with wheels first.








