He definitely could have made it smoother, but he doesn't care. Also, the very back could maybe be truncated into a Kammback for similar or a little better performance (probably not quantifiable) since the taper beyond 50% of the maximum cross section of the vehicle creates more skin drag, but that's not a huge source of drag on a car, so it would more benefit by reducing the length and maybe better adhering to traditional ideas on what a car should look like (ideas which are wrong—they date to a ling-ago day when cars were designed to resemble trains, a symbol of speed and power back then, not intelligent efficiency born of necessity like that of an aircraft).
The back is more important than the front. The cut off all cars have, which is why most are stupid, creates wake drag. Run your hand horizontally through water while holding it vertically. Feel the drag, maybe see the swirling water turbulence following your hand. Now try it holding your hand horizontally. I'm sure you don't actually have to try this to know the difference. Ever draft a tractor trailer? That low pressure zone that makes it easier for your car comes at the expense of the truck (although, in theory, drafting him helps reduce some of his turbulence, don't expect the driver or a cop to care). It's like a giant vacuum cleaner constantly pulling it back, requiring more power to move through the air. The truck's shape serves a purpose of utility, though around an open taper off the back of the trailer has been tested in Europe to improve mileage by up to 7.5%:
http://green.autoblog.com/2009/11/13/co ... -trailers/ which is a big deal on tractor trailers and would likely make a larger percentage improvement on cars due to a lesser rolling resistance.
There are simple ways to improve aero, several of which I'm doing to the wagon, though none will do as much as greatly reducing the wake turbulence with a boattail, the point is to keep the storage useful and not have it be 20 feet long.
Cleaning up the undercarriage, especially where many stupid cars have the rear bumper hanging down in the air stream like a parachute. Lowering can reduce the benefits of cleaning this up, but lowering does reduce frontal area a little, which helps. Which is of more benefit would probably require a wind tunnel to know, but I fall on the side of stock height and cleaner underbody (but I also like to be able to drive over sidewalks and islands when necessary).
Engine compartment turbulence reduction. Combined with an underbody cover, sealing the engine compartment off from air flow by ducting the exhaust air from the radiator into a low pressure zone reduces drag (and lift from the build up of higher pressure) from the engine and components, which improves cooling as well. I'm using the space behind the leading edge of the hood for the air exit, much like the rally cars use. On my prototypes, I'll be ducting it out the sides through something resembling gills on a shark (the resemblance goes with the vehicle being reminiscent of both a Great White and a Curtis P-40).
Blocking off the upper grille. Not only is it unnecessary for cooling and increases drag, but combined with the ducting, should increase cooling efficiency to block off. If you look at the speed record Legacys, they also do this. Many things done on speed record cars are useful as drag reduction helps top speed as well as mileage.
Covering the wheels or getting flat wheel covers. I'm not going to do this, though I might test a partial skirt on the rear, which isn't usually a huge help, but depends on the vehicle. Covering the front, making them wide enough to allow the front wheels to turn, would be more of a PITA, and be difficult to integrate into the body design so it wouldn't look strange. On my prototype, they will be enclosed in enlarged Cessna 172 wheel pants since they are separate from the body like a single-seat race car. Because the whole vehicle looks like an old fighter plane, the wheel pants will appear to fit because people are used to associating covered wheels with aircraft fuselages. At the least, the wheel covers won't stand out as being particularly strange compared to the rest of the thing.
A rear spoiler, when located or angled property can help. I'll be adding a rear spoiler and angling it down at 12 degrees to reduce wake turbulence a little. On a sedan, depending on the angle from the roof to the end of the trunk, a wing could help airflow off the roof reattach in a smoother manner than it would without the wing, reducing wake turbulence which could otherwise be almost as bad as a wagon. This is why the Civic Hybrid has a small lip spoiler.
Replacing mirrors with cameras would be nice if the law ever catches up to technology. What about low-drag mirrors? Because they look low drag doesn't necessarily mean they are (or they aren't), but they're generally less useful in terms of visibility and since they still create drag, I'm personally not interested in doing anything with them until cameras are legalized. The Aerocivic gets around the law by mounting mirrors on the inside, which is technically legal (may vary by state), but I question the usefulness.
Midnight in a Perfect World on Amazon or order anywhere. The first book in a quartet chronicling the rise of a man from angry criminal to philanthropist. Midnight... is a distopic noirish novel featuring 'Duchess', a modified 1990 Subaru Legacy wagon.