: How the "Buick" represents the classic American dream and road-trip culture, while the "Moon" represents the unattainable or the dreamlike nature of the protagonists' love.
A paper examining how country music uses impossible engineering feats to express eternal devotion.
Depending on your interest—whether it's film studies, music, or a whimsical engineering concept—here are three "paper" concepts you can develop: 1. Film & Literary Analysis: "Driving Buicks to the Moon" Buicks to the Moon
: You could discuss orbital mechanics, the 2000 m/s speed difference between Earth’s rotation and the Moon’s orbit, and why a literal bridge would be "ripped apart" by gravitational forces.
: Think of it as an xkcd-style "What If?" analysis of Alan Jackson’s lyrics. Kwasu Tembo - Lancaster University research directory : How the "Buick" represents the classic American
This concept explores the phrase's use in David Lynch’s 1990 film Wild at Heart , which features the Alan Jackson song.
The phrase originates from the 1996 country song by Alan Jackson, where the lyric "they'll be driving Buicks to the moon" serves as a metaphor for an impossible event that would have to happen before the narrator stops loving his partner. Film & Literary Analysis: "Driving Buicks to the
: The juxtaposition of "innocence and experience" within the film’s surreal Americana.