I'll stop beating this dead horse . . . after I beat it one last time.
There's a lot here that I don't like. The creases in the hood look random, like two different guys working independently came up with two different ideas, and somebody combined them without even really thinking about it.
The black "grille-ettes" below the headlights look nonfunctional. (My Mustang has very similar, slightly smaller panels that look like they do something but don't.) If so, they just add drag. And, IMO, they don't look particularly good. I mean, what are they supposed to appear to
be? Cooling vents for the front brakes, maybe?
What are the horizontal bars near the tops of those grille-ettes doing? Adding drag and weight? Colin Chapman, the genius behind Lotus Cars, had a saying: "Add simplicity and lightness." Chevy seems to be doing the opposite here.
Half of the "mouth" is blocked off with what appears to be black plastic. That looks tacky and cheap. If they don't need airflow, just make the grille opening smaller and have what's not the grille in body color.
This is all a matter of taste, but I don't like it that every line--from hood creases to headlights to the front edge of the hood (is that the right term when there's no engine in there?) points inward and down. Except for the two lines that don't--the body-color panels separating the nonfunctional grille-ettes from the half-blocked-off grille. It looks like what an art student would produce if told to draw a cartoon of a car that looks mean and fast.
As Cumberford said in his review, it will likely be a supremely competent car. And I'm sure Chevy will sell every one of them at a handsome profit.
For awhile during the recession, the only
car that Chevy was selling at a profit was the Corvette. Corvette and Chevy Trucks were keeping the division going.