Gone is the model's polarizing mouth-breather look, binned in favor of the trapezoidal son-of-Aston grille treatment.

Regardless of what you make of the exterior changes, the interior rework is likely to be more welcome. The outgoing cabin featured a high-tech aesthetic, but it also felt cluttered and button-heavy. Not so with the new one, which features a sporty three-spoke wheel and a slimmer, nicely rationalized center stack an arm's length away. The latter is a major improvement, with more traditional and user-friendly climate and infotainment controls and a handy phone bin with adjacent USB and 12V plugs. MyFord Touch remains the resident interface on navigation-equipped models like our Titanium-spec tester, and while the system is improving, it's still far from our favorite. Material choice and observed fit-and-finish on these early-run cars was very good, as was seat comfort.

We can't go much further without noting the Focus' much-updated appearance. Gone is the 2014 model's polarizing mouth-breather look, binned in favor of the trapezoidal son-of-Aston grille treatment and narrower headlamp look that's spread throughout Ford's passenger car lineup. It's a comprehensive rethink that includes a wholly different front fascia, light fixtures, fenders, hood, and even a relocated and resized Blue Oval emblem. Out back, the old car's v-shaped license plate pocket has been smoothed over and a pair of reshaped, somehow duller taillamps now bookend the hatchback. Overall, the new look is much more refined and svelte, but to our eyes it somehow lacks the brashness and distinctiveness of the previous car.

Powering away into the French countryside, if nobody told you there was an Evian bottle's worth of displacement split among three cylinders determining your progress, you'd never, ever suspect it. Thanks to its Continental turbo that helps deliver the engine's full 148 pound-feet of torque from just 1,400 rpm, the 1.0-liter EcoBoost behaves like a much larger unit – in fact, its power delivery characteristics are almost diesel-like in the way it delivers strong low-end performance but doesn't like to rev much. Yes, the engine's 123 horsepower arrives in full at 6,000 rpm, but peak torque packs it in at 4,000 rpm. Despite an indicated redline of 7,000 revs, an electronic limiter rudely cut in 500 revs early. Thankfully, you won't often find yourself needing to rev that high, and besides, Ford officials promise the gauge markings will be corrected before the car arrives in the US later this year.

Fortunately, any questions of powertrain refinement quickly go out the window once you step on the throttle. This 1.0L is pleasant piece of work, with no dead spots, untoward vibrations or high volume levels to accompany its efforts. Counterintuitively, the engine features an old-school iron block and aluminum head – Ford engineers note that iron's superior stiffness and quicker warm-up times as the prime reasons for going with the less-costly metal, and besides, with such a small engine, mass is less of an issue to begin with. The long-stroke design incorporates twin variable cam timing and charge cooling to boost low-end oomph and overall drivability.

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