Evoking one of the great Alfa Romeo sports saloons, the new Giulia will rock the compact executive car sector.

One of the most evocative names in Alfa Romeo’s memorable history returns in the new year.

‘Giulia’ adorned a series of sporting saloons or, with the addition of ‘Sprint’ or ‘Spider’, several coupes and convertibles.

For now, however, Giulia reappears on a compact executive saloon recalling the famous Type 105 model, which enjoyed a long production run from 1962 to 1978, finding time to be the other star car in that Mini-fest, The Italian Job.

Although scripted as the fall guy in the 1969 film, the Giulia was probably more than capable of dealing with the Minis, being light, fast and manoeuvrable.

They were also much loved by the Italian police and their stern paramilitary counterparts, the Carabinieri, who favoured a dark blue body/white roof livery seemingly chosen for the 105’s lines.

Alfa Romeo could repeat that heyday with the all-new slippery and slick Giulia, and returning to the classic driver’s car, rear-wheel drive layout favoured by that compact executive sector king, the BMW 3 Series. It will also be sold with all-wheel drive (AWD), responding to the 3 Series’ new XDrive format, itself countering the Quattro system used by another sector stalwart, Audi’s A4.

Can Alfa really turn back the clock? The fanbase is there; it’s what has kept Alfa alive during some lean years, but this famous brand must get it more than right this time in terms of reliability and quality – there is the perception that Alfas are troublesome.

But fans can’t say FIAT isn’t backing its famous sporting arm: Giulia is tipped to be the vanguard for eight new Alfas and massive investment over the next three years, with sales expectations of some 400,000 a year – more than five times current levels.

The Giulia will launch with image-building performance models like the Quadrifoglio (four-leaved clover) flagship, featuring an all-aluminium Ferrari-inspired 510bhp 2.9-litre turbo petrol V6 engine, delivering 0-62mph in just 3.9 seconds and a maximum of 191mph. But while this grabs headlines, it is mainstream Giulia models that will land the vital volumes against the 3 Series, A4 and Co, so prices will have to start at around £25,000.

The car’s dramatic looks and quality, exotically named colours like Competizione Red, Trofeo White, Vulcano Black, and Montecarlo Blue, plus that legendary kite-shaped grille should then do the rest.

Alfa Romeo Giulia

Price: from £32,300

Driving appeal: *****(expected)

Image: *****

Space: ****

Value: *****

Running costs: ****

Reliability: not yet available

How green?: ****

Best rival: BMW 3 Series

News in brief

Croptop Evoque

One of 2016’s key launches will be the Range Rover Evoque convertible, seen here slightly disguised for a media stunt when it became the first vehicle to drive through Crossrail tunnels being built below London. A challenge during development has been creating an automatic roll over protection not activated prematurely in off-road situations – just in case anyone tests its prowess.

4G Prius eco star

Toyota’s Prius family hatchback has become the UK’s best-known ‘green’ car since its launch here in 1999. Four generations on, the new model - arriving in early 2016 – continues to impress. This time it delivers an 18 per cent boost in fuel and emissions performance, largely through smaller and lighter components in the petrol-electric hybrid powertrain and battery pack.

Electric car dreams

Electric cars will be the norm in 10 years, according to research by the joint industry and Government-funded Go Ultra-Low campaign. Significantly, the electric charge will be led by a new generation, keen to plug into greener motoring; 81 per cent of 14-year-olds dream that their first car will be electric, like the current Renault Zoe.

w