Throughout the James Bond series of films and novels, Q Branch has given Bond a wide variety of vehicles with which to battle his enemies. Among the most noteworthy gadgets, Bond has been equipped with various vehicles that have numerous modifications to include elaborate weapons and anti-pursuit systems, alternative transportation modes, and various other functions, but one car in particular has always been linked to Mr. Bond's luxurious collection, the Aston Martin DB5.
Road Vehicles
Alfa Romeo
AMC
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
The Man With The Golden Gun | AMC Hornet | American Motors Car dealership | Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun.[4] Bond steals this red 1974 hatchback from an AMC dealership in Bangkok, Thailand. He makes his exit by crashing through the showroom window.[5] unknowing that Sheriff J.W. Pepper was in it looking to test drive it. A Hornet was also used for the famous twisting corkscrew aerial jump that was captured in just one filming sequence.[6][7] A special modified car performed the stunt with a lower stance and larger wheel wells (just as the Astro Spiral Javelin stunt cars that performed that same jump in AMC sponsored thrill shows) compared to the stock Hornet X model in all of its other appearances in the movie. Seven tests were performed in advance before the one jump performed by an uncredited British stuntman "Bumps" Williard for the film with six (or 8, depending on the source) cameras simultaneously rolling.[8] Two frogmen were positioned in the water, as well as an emergency vehicle and a crane were ready, but not needed. An engineer[9] at the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory (CAL) used computer modeling to calculate the stunt and specified 1,460.06 kilograms (3,219 lb) for the weight of car and driver, the exact angles and the 15.86-metre (52 ft) distance between the ramps, as well as the 64.36-kilometre-per-hour (40 mph) launch speed.[10] This vehicle is on display at the National Motor Museum in Beaulieu, Hampshire.[11] The ramps are still in the possession of the Jay Milligan's stunt company, JM Productions in Hamburg, New York. |
AMC Matador coupe | Francisco Scaramanga and Nick Nack | The featured car in The Man with the Golden Gun.[12] "Bond is foiled by perhaps the best trick a getaway car has ever performed; the Matador transforms into a plane."[13] Francisco Scaramanga and Nick Nack use this 1974 car to kidnap Mary Goodnight and make their escape. In the film, the Matador coupe is converted into a 'car plane' to fly from Bangkok to an island in the China Sea. With the flight tail unit, the complete machine was 9.15 metres (30 ft) long, 12.80 metres (42 ft) wide, and 3.08 metres (10 ft) high and the "flying AMC Matador" was exhibited at auto shows; however, it could only make a 500-metre (1,640 ft) flight so for the film's aerial sequences it was replaced by a meter-long (39-inch) remote controlled model.[10] Transformation of the AMC Matador into a light airplane occurred when wings and flight tail unit were attached to the actual car (that served as the fuselage and landing gear) and a stuntman drove the 'car plane' to a runway at which point the scene cut to the radio-controlled scale model built by John Stears.[8] See Aircraft section below. |
AMC Matador sedan | Bangkok Police | The featured police car in The Man with the Golden Gun.[14] The 1974 Matador used in the chase is a left-hand drive model although Thailand operates with UK style left-hand traffic rules. |
Moonraker | AMC Concord | Drax Industries | A 1978 D/L station wagon is seen in Moonraker where Bond and Hugo Drax are pigeon hunting.[15] |
Jeep Wagoneer | | Bond is seen briefly driving the Jeep through some caves.[16] |
A View to a Kill | Jeep Cherokee (XJ) | Stacey Sutton | Featured in A View to a Kill where Stacey is seen driving home.[17] |
Licence to Kill | Jeep CJ-7 | Henchman Perez | A 1976 Renegade-II is seen in Licence to Kill.[18] It is used by Sanchez's henchman Perez, who fires a FIM-92 Stinger missile at a commandeered oil tanker where Bond does a wheelie (in this scene, Bond crushes the Jeep). |
Tomorrow Never Dies | Jeep Cherokee (XJ) | Wai Lin | A 1997 XJ Cherokee right-hand drive export model is seen in front of Wai Lin's hideout.[19] |
Aston Martin
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
Goldfinger | Aston Martin DB5[20] | James Bond | Featured in six films (Goldfinger, Thunderball, GoldenEye, a small appearance in Tomorrow Never Dies, Casino Royale and Skyfall). In the novelisation of GoldenEye it is stated that Bond purchased the DB5 as his own personal vehicle, although the 2006 version of Casino Royale, which reboots Bond film continuity, shows Bond winning it in a game of poker in The Bahamas; as such the Casino Royale version of the vehicle is the only one that is not outfitted with special equipment (Brosnan's DB5 is shown to have special features in GoldenEye such as a teleprinter disguised as a CD player, and a champagne cooler). The DB5 can also be used in the video games Agent Under Fire and From Russia with Love. The DB5 also made cameo appearances in the comedy film, The Cannonball Run, driven by Roger Moore's character, and in the TV-film The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E., George Lazenby, playing a Bond-like character referred to as "JB", drives a DB5 (with the licence plate "JB"). It also appears in numerous other films in association to Bond including a small cameo in Catch Me If You Can (2002) where the main character purchases one to be like Bond, Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003) in which Bernie Mac's Bosley drives one and The Life and Death of Peter Sellers (2004) in which Geoffrey Rush, playing Peter Sellers, is shown driving one at the time of making Casino Royale, even though in real life that film did not feature the vehicle. A model is currently on display in the International Spy Museum in the Penn Quarter neighborhood of Washington, D.C.
The Goldfinger DB5 with gadgets was sold on October 27, 2010 for $4.6m (£2.9m) to the car collector Harry Yeaggy.[21][22] It features the pop out gun barrels behind the front indicators, the bullet shield behind the rear window and a 3-way revolving front number plate showing "GOLD FINGER" or "JB007" or "BMT216A". |
On Her Majesty's Secret Service | Aston Martin DBS[23] | The car was seen in only four scenes, including the pre-credits teaser and as James and Tracy's wedding car. Nothing is known about what kind of gadgets were installed, except that it had a hiding place for a sniper rifle in the glovebox. Obviously — given what happens at the end of that movie — it was not fitted with bulletproof glass. The DBS is glimpsed in the subsequent film, Diamonds Are Forever, parked up in Q Branch back in London when Bond calls Q from Amsterdam. The car was actually cropped out of the frame on the "pan-and-scan version" of the film. |
The Living Daylights | Aston Martin V8 Vantage Volante | A convertible, it is later "winterised" with a hardtop. It comes with all the usual refinements, including extending side outriggers, spike-producing tires, missiles, lasers (an update of the DB5's tyre-slashers), signal-intercepting smart radio, head-up display and rocket propulsion. It could also self-destruct when primed. |
GoldenEye | Aston Martin DB5 | Driven in the opening scenes by Bond, whilst racing a Ferrari. |
Tomorrow Never Dies | Aston Martin DB5 | Seen parked in front of Oxford University and driven by Bond in a transitional scene of Bond arriving at the Ministry of Defence |
The World Is Not Enough | Aston Martin DB5 | Seen parked in at the funerals of Sir Robert King |
Die Another Day | Aston Martin V12 Vanquish[24] | The car is equipped with all the usual refinements, including front-firing rockets between two machine guns, hood-mounted target-seeking shotguns, spike-producing tires, again and a passenger ejector seat in homage to the original Aston Martin DB5, but used here in a clever bit of improvisation by 007 to right the car when it's been flipped onto its roof. The Aston was also equipped with "adaptive camouflage" – a cloaking device that allowed it to become effectively invisible at the push of a button. This vehicle was also featured in the video games Nightfire (2002) and Everything or Nothing (2004). |
Casino Royale | Aston Martin DB5, Aston Martin DBS V12 | Featured in the second Casino Royale.[25] No special gadget was visible on the DBS other than the secret compartments which housed Bond's Walther P99, and an emergency med kit which includes components of an emergency medical link to MI6 HQ, antidotes to various poisons and a small defibrillator. The DB5 is owned by a gambling villain in the Bahamas, which Bond acquires in a poker game. It has no special modifications. |
Quantum of Solace | Aston Martin DBS V12 | A slightly darker coloured vehicle to that featured in Casino Royale is heavily damaged after a chase at the beginning of the film in Siena, Italy. |
Skyfall | Aston Martin DB5 | Two gadgets are shown on this vehicle, the ejector seat (although not demonstrated) and two front firing machine guns. This is the first time the machine guns have been used in action since 1964's Goldfinger. This car is destroyed in the climactic battle scene. It is unknown if this is the same Aston Martin DB5 that Bond obtained in Casino Royale. An Aston Martin DB5 appeared in 007 Blood Stone and shared a similar fate to the DB5 in Skyfall. |
Spectre | Aston Martin DB10 | The starring car. |
- Bamford & Martin 1.5 litre Side Valve
The Bamford & Martin 1.5 litre Side Valve Short Chassis Tourer was James Bond's first car. He inherited it around Easter 1933 in the first Young Bond novel SilverFin from his uncle Max at the age of thirteen. Bond regularly drove the car, although he was underage, and stored it in a nearby garage while he attended Eton. The car was destroyed in the third Young Bond novel, Double or Die, in December 1933 leading Bond to replace it by purchasing the Bentley Mark IV shortly thereafter in the same novel.
- Aston Martin DB Mark III
Bond drives an Aston Martin DB Mark III, which is referred to as a "DB III" in the novel Goldfinger. The "DB3" was a car designed specifically for racing and is unlikely that Bond would drive one. The DB Mark III is often called the DB III and is more comparable to its description in Fleming's novel. This car was the only gadget-laden vehicle to be mentioned in the original Bond novels, though Fleming generally avoided gadgetry in his books. It included switches to alter the type of color of the front and rear lights, reinforced steel bumpers, a Colt .45 pistol in a trick compartment under the driver's seat, and a homing device similar to the DB5 in the film.
Audi
AvtoVAZ
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
The Living Daylights | VAZ-2106 | Czechoslovak Law Enforcement | Several are engaged in pursuit and are destroyed at the hands of Bond's Aston Martin, the first is cut in half by the Aston's laser tyre shredder, the second is sunk into a frozen lake after the Aston cuts a hole in the ice, whilst another plummets from a ramp and goes through a shed. |
VAZ-2105 | KGB | Used by a KGB agent to tail Kara Milovy. |
GoldenEye | VAZ-2105 | St. Petersburg Police | Several go in pursuit of Bond in the stolen tank, but all are destroyed in various collisions. |
The World Is Not Enough | VAZ-2121 | Sasha Davidov | After killing Davidov, Bond uses the car whilst infiltrating Renard's operation. |
Bentley
- Bentley Mark IV
There has never been a Bentley model known as the "Mark IV": neither from the "old" W.O. Bentley firm, nor from Rolls-Royce after the takeover of Bentley Motors in 1931. The "Mark IV" appellation seems to have been created by Ian Fleming, and erroneously perpetuated since. In contradistinction to the films, James Bond's official car in the Ian Fleming novels was a grey 1933 Bentley convertible. The car featured a 4.5 L engine with the Amherst Villiers supercharger. In the novels, no gadgets were installed; this was Bond's personal vehicle that is mentioned in Casino Royale as being a hobby that Bond enjoys working on. Its only armament, in the novels, is a .45 Colt Army Special revolver Bond keeps in the glove compartment. The novel version of the Bentley Mark IV was destroyed during a chase sequence in Moonraker. The Bentley is also the very first Bond vehicle seen in the film series, although it was shown very briefly during Bond's first scene in From Russia with Love and mentioned only in passing in Goldfinger. In From Russia with Love, the only gadget known to be included was a car phone, which in 1963 was very uncommon. The film version of Goldfinger strongly implies that the Bentley was issued to Bond by Q-Branch, since he asks Q about the vehicle, only to be told that it had "had its day". He is given the Aston Martin instead.
In Casino Royale, Fleming writes that Bond bought the car "almost new" in 1933 and had it stored during the war, which is mentioned in the Young Bond novel Double or Die. In Live and Let Die Fleming states the automobile's year as 1933, however in Moonraker Fleming states it is from 1930. This earlier date is the correct one, as the Bentley 4½ Litre ceased production in 1930.
- Bentley Mark VI
Made in 1953, Bond purchases his second Bentley towards the end of the novel, Moonraker. Like his previous Bentley, the Mark VI is grey with dark blue leather upholstery. After Moonraker this model is never mentioned again.
- Bentley Mark II Continental
A Bentley Mark II Continental was featured in the novel Thunderball and is Bond's final Bentley. Bond, having purchased the car in a wrecked state, upgrades the engine from a 4.5 L engine to a 4.9 L and has a custom drophead body from Mulliners. The Mark II was also grey; however, the interior was black leather. The Mark II Continental is last seen in the novel On Her Majesty's Secret Service where Bond upgrades the vehicles once again with an Arnott supercharger controlled by a magnetic clutch, causing Rolls-Royce, worried about potential damage to the engine, to disown the car. He uses the car in a race with the Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo in her Lancia Flaminia Spyder towards the beginning of the book. Bond dubs the car "the locomotive".
- Bentley Mulsanne Turbo
Bond purchases a Mulsanne Turbo in John Gardner's Role of Honour. The car is British racing green with magnolia interior. It is outfitted with a long-range telephone and a hidden weapon compartment.
BMW
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
Octopussy | BMW 518i | West German police | Two of these cars are seen in a short chase scene when Bond commandeers an Alfa Romeo GTV6 and makes haste towards Octopussy's circus. These two cars are in pursuit. |
GoldenEye | BMW Z3[26] | British Secret Service | Supposedly equipped with 'Stinger' missiles and other armaments, which are never seen or used except for a deployable parachute and auto-HUD. Car is left-hand drive. Total screen time less than two minutes. |
Tomorrow Never Dies | BMW 750iL[27] | Loaned to Bond by Q at an Avis rental station in Germany, this car is equipped with missile launchers, caltrops, self-inflating tires and a near-impenetrable body. The BMW can be remotely controlled via a special Ericsson cell phone. During a chase inside a carpark, Bond exits the car and remotely drives it to the rooftop, sending it flying off the carpark before crash-landing into an Avis station across the street. |
BMW R1200C motorcycle | Stolen | Driven by James Bond and Wai Lin with some Range Rovers in pursuit in Saigon, Vietnam. |
The World Is Not Enough | BMW Z8 | British Secret Service | Cut in half by chopper after firing one shot. |
British Leyland/Rover/MG
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
Diamonds Are Forever | Triumph Stag | Peter Franks | Commandeered by Bond at the Port of Dover, after Franks is arrested. |
The Man With The Golden Gun | MGB | Mary Goodnight | This tan MGB is owned by Hong Kong's MI6 agent Mary Goodnight. She and Bond follow Andrea Anders in her dark green Rolls-Royce; they end up at the Peninsula Hotel where Bond discovers that they have a fleet of dark green Rolls-Royces. |
The Spy Who Loved Me | Leyland Sherpa van | Jaws | Used by Jaws posing as a telephone engineer. He subsequently tears it apart trying to thwart Bond and Anya's escape. The van's engine eventually overheats and seizes in the middle of the desert |
Octopussy | Austin FX4 taxi | British Intelligence | Used by Smithers to follow Kamal Khan from Sotheby's |
The Living Daylights | Rover 800 | British Government | Appears outside the Blayden Safe House, and in the emergency response convoy shortly after Necros' attack. |
Tomorrow Never Dies | Daimler Limousine | British Government | |
Citroën
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
From Russia With Love | Citroën 11 Legere | Bulgarian agents | Agents follow Bond through Istanbul |
On Her Majesty's Secret Service | Citroën 2CV | Marc-Ange Draco's men | They follow Bond from hotel Splendide to the beach in this car |
For Your Eyes Only | Citroën 2CV | Melina Havelock | Used in major car chase, after Bond's own car - Lotus Esprit Turbo - explodes. Bond and love interest Malina Havelock are pursued by evil henchmen in Peugeot 504s. The chase includes a hairpin road, an olive orchard, and a village. At one point the 2CV is on its side, and is righted by hand. Bond and Havelock dispatch their pursuers with car accidents, and make their escape. |
Novel | Vehicle | Owner | Notes |
Casino Royale | Citroen Traction Avant | Le Chiffre | In the car chase scene this is the Citroen being pursued by Bond's Bentley |
Ford Motor Company
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
Dr. No | Ford Anglia 105E | Strangways | Strangways is shot in the vehicle by the Three Blind Mice. This was the first vehicle to feature in any James Bond film. |
Goldfinger | 1964 Lincoln Continental | Auric Goldfinger | Mr Solo is shot in the backseat by Oddjob and the vehicle is driven to a junkyard and crushed in a baling press. Note that the vehicle which is crushed is a 1963 model. Later in the film a pair (a sedan and a convertible) bring Bond to the airport on behalf of the U.S. Government. |
Ford Country Squire | Red 1964 Station Wagon |
Ford Ranchero | Driven by Oddjob to carry the crushed Lincoln back to the Goldfinger's Kentucky horsefarm. |
Ford Thunderbird | Felix Leiter | White 1964 Convertible |
Ford Mustang Convertible | Tilly Masterton | White over red 1964 convertible. (Called the T-5 in Europe) Tires and lower portion of the right side slashed by Bond's Aston Martin DB5. |
Thunderball | Fiona Volpe | |
Ford Fairlane Skyliner | Count Lippe | As a punishment for failing to dispose of Bond, Lippe is killed in his Fairlane, which is blown up by villainess Fiona Volpe using rocket launchers mounted on her BSA motorbike. |
Ford Thunderbird | Emilio Largo | |
Lincoln Continental | James Bond (1965 convertible); Jacques Bouvoir (1964 Lehmann-Peterson limousine) | |
On Her Majesty's Secret Service | Mercury Cougar XR7 | Contessa Teresa de Vicenzo (née: Tracy Draco, Tracy Bond) | Red on Red 1969 Convertible, Driven by Tracy onto a Portuguese beach where she attempts suicide, later in a winter stock-car race on an ice-covered track to help Bond escape from Blofeld's henchmen and Irma Bund. |
Diamonds Are Forever | Ford Mustang Mach 1 | Tiffany Case | The highlight of the Las Vegas car chase is the Mustang balancing on two side wheels to drive through a narrow alley (and mysteriously comes out of the alley on the other two wheels!). |
Ford Econoline | Dr. Metz | After Tiffany creates a diversion in the gas station, Bond sneaks into the back of the van to gain access to the Whyte Tectronics facility. |
Ford Thunderbird | Mister Wint and Mister Kidd | Used to transport Bond from the basement of the Whyte House out to the Nevada desert to have him buried alive in an underground pipe. |
Ford Custom 500 | Las Vegas P.D. squads, Clark County Sheriff's Department, numerous Las Vegas taxicabs | |
Ford Galaxie 500 sedan | James Bond (copper-plated sedan 007 is sitting in where he meets with Felix where the CIA agents lose Tiffany) | |
Ford LTD | Whyte Tectronics security forces | Several go in pursuit of Bond in the stolen moon buggy, and are destroyed or damaged in the ensuing chase through the desert. |
The Spy Who Loved Me | Ford Taunus 2.3 Ghia | Jaws and Stromberg's henchmen | The windscreen is sprayed with paint by Bond's Lotus Esprit, the driver loses control and the car careers off a mountainside and crashes through a barn roof. Jaws (as ever) walks away from the crash unscathed. |
A View to a Kill | Ford Bronco | Chuck Lee | |
Ford LTD | James Bond | Bond uses this car to pursue Stacy to Oakland. |
Licence to Kill | Mercury Grand Marquis stretched limousine | Truman-Lodge | |
Lincoln Mark VII LSC | James Bond | |
Tomorrow Never Dies | Ford Scorpio | Elliot Carver's henchmen | |
Die Another Day | Ford Thunderbird | Giacinta Jinx Johnson | |
Ford Fairlane | James Bond | Ford Fairlane briefly driven by Bond during his visit to Cuba in Die Another Day. A homage to Thunderball where villain Count Lippe drives a 1957 Ford Fairlane Skyliner. |
Casino Royale | Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor | Miami Police | |
Ford Mondeo 2.5 Litre ST | James Bond | This car is on display in the James Bond Experience at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu |
Quantum of Solace | Ford Ka (Hydrogen Fuel Cell Model) | Camille, when she picks up 007 | |
Ford Edge (Hydrogen Fuel Cell Model) | Dominic Greene, later by James Bond | |
Ford Bronco II | Stolen by James Bond | |
Novel | Vehicle | Owner | Notes |
Goldfinger | Ford Popular | Oddjob | Oddjob uses this car for making the tour around Goldfinger's properties |
For Your Eyes Only | Ford Consul | Major Gonzales and his henchmen (stolen) | The trio uses a stolen car to get from Havelock's estate to Port Antonio |
Thunderball | Felix Leiter | Leiter rents this car for the purpose of his mission |
The Spy Who Loved Me | Ford Thunderbird | James Bond | Bond rents this car for the purpose of getting from Toronto to Washington |
The Man With The Golden Gun | Francisco Scaramanga | Bond follows this car to Thunderbird hotel |
General Motors
Jaguar Cars
Land Rover
Lotus
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
The Spy Who Loved Me | Lotus Esprit S1 | James Bond | Delivered to Bond by Q in Sardinia, this Lotus is capable of transforming into a submarine. In this mode, it is equipped with anti-aircraft missiles. This car is on display in the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.[30] RM Auctions auctioned the white Lotus Esprit submarine in London on September 9, 2013 for £550,000 ($865,000).[31] |
For Your Eyes Only | Lotus Esprit Turbo | Two Esprits are featured in this film. The first, a white model driven by Bond in Spain, is destroyed when a thug trips its self-destruct system by breaking the driver's side window. The second one is a bronze model driven by Bond at a ski resort in Northern Italy. Contrary to popular belief, these two were not repainted Essex-spec Turbo Esprits but specially commissioned cars. |
Mercedes-Benz
Rolls-Royce
Saab
Other passenger cars
- Auto rickshaw: Featured in Octopussy. Two of these basic auto rickshaws are used in a chase sequence through the streets of Udaipur — Bond and fellow MI6 agent Vijay being in one, with Gobinda and his henchmen in the pursuing vehicle. It is insinuated that the auto rickshaw driven by Vijay has been modified by MI6 as the tone of the engine becomes more like a motorcycle and Vijay performs a wheelie, exclaiming, "This is a company car!"
- Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire: In Ian Fleming's Diamonds Are Forever is the car that takes Bond to London airport at the start of the novel.
- Cord Model 810 from 1939: In Ian Fleming's Live and Let Die, Bond takes the car from Felix Leiter after he is injured and drives it down to the docks to get into the wild shootout with the Robber.
- Dodge Diplomat: Featured in A View To A Kill as a San Francisco Police Department patrol car. A few late 1970s Dodge Monacos were seen, along with a Plymouth Volaré seen outside San Francisco City Hall. Late 1980s Diplomats were also featured in Licence to Kill as the squad cars in Key West, Florida (some may have been identical Plymouth Gran Furys).
- Dodge Polara: a 1964 model year seen in You Only Live Twice as a getaway vehicle after Henderson is stabbed by a hitman.
- Dodge Ram 150 pickup truck from the late-1980s—Seen in Licence To Kill during the tanker pursuit scene.
- Ferrari F355 GTS: Featured in GoldenEye. Xenia Onatopp playfully races James Bond in his Aston Martin DB5 by chance on the mountain roads behind Monte Carlo in this vehicle, which is later revealed to have false French registration plates, hinting that it may be stolen. Another 355 appears twice in Die Another Day during the opening sequence, and later on the AN-124 airplane. It is then pushed out of the plane along with the Lamborghini Diablo.
- Ferrari 360 Modena: appears briefly in the opening sequence of Die Another Day.
- Ford Five Hundred: Two can be briefly seen in the parking lot of the resort in Nassau in Casino Royale after Bond backs the Range Rover into another car
- Humber Super Snipe Series II: Bond and Leiter take a brief tour in a car that belongs to the governor of the Bahamas in Ian Fleming's Thunderball
- Lamborghini Diablo: appears in the opening sequence of Die Another Day (film) and is later being loaded onto the AN-124 Airplane. The Lamborghini is then pushed out of the plane and seen sticking nose first in the mud by Bond and Jinx as they fly over.[36]
- Lancia Flaminia Zagato Spyder: driven by Tracy in Ian Fleming's O.H.M.S.S.. With her white model she overtakes, then races Bond in his Bentley near Royale-les-Eaux
- Mazda Cosmo Sport 110S: This vehicle, Mazda's first rotary-powered car, was briefly seen in You Only Live Twice.
- Mini Moke: Featured briefly in Live and Let Die and later in The Spy Who Loved Me. In Live and Let Die, Bond and Rosie use this vehicle to drive to the harbor to meet Quarrel Jr. In Spy, the crew of the Liparus supertanker uses a Mini Moke in their defense against a break out by the submarine crews. Also seen in Moonraker where Bond and Dr. Goodhead are hiding in a trailer (prior to boarding Moonraker 6 as pilots) after escaping from an air vent during Moonraker 5's launch.
- Peugeot 504: Two Peugeot 504s featured in For Your Eyes Only, used by Hector Gonzales' henchmen to chase Bond and Melina driving with Citroën 2CV.
- Peugeot 403: In short story From a View to a Kill Bond uses Marie Ann Russell's car while on assignment in France. In Ian Fleming's O.H.M.S.S. Bond is picked up by one of Draco's men, who takes him to the helicopter hideout with this car.
- Porsche 911 Turbo (993): seen briefly in the opening sequence of Die Another Day. It is destroyed in an explosion.
- Porsche Cayenne Turbo: A secondary vehicle for all-terrain conditions in the computer game James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing.
- Range Rover Sport: Featured in Casino Royale, Bond purposely crashes it in a hotel parking lot to serve as a distraction. A black version of the Range Rover Vogue is one of the cars used by Le Chiffre's henchmen.
- Renault 11 Taxi: Featured in A View to a Kill, Bond commandeers this car and takes it on a pursuit through Paris. During the pursuit the car has its roof chopped off and then later the entire back half of the car is ripped off.
- Renault Fuego: used in A View to a Kill to transport of the Bond Girl.
- Renault 5 Turbo 2: used by Fatima Blush in Never Say Never Again after killing Nicole, provoking James to take chase on motorcycle.
- Simca Aronde: Bond rents this car for the purpose of following Tracy without being noticed in Ian Fleming's O.H.M.S.S.
- Studillac: A custom black Studebaker convertible with a Cadillac engine, plus special transmission, brakes and rear axle, owned by Felix Leiter in the novel Diamonds Are Forever. The combination of the aerodynamic Raymond Loewy-designed body with the powerful Cadillac engine made it into a remarkable sports car. Studillacs were not fictional, but actually built by a Long Island, NY company called Bill Frick Motors from 1953 Studebaker Starlight bodies.
- Sunbeam-Talbot 90 Coupe: Featured in Live And Let Die novel. Commander Strangways gives this car to Bond.
- Toyota Celica GT: Briefly seen in The Man with the Golden Gun, Scaramanga and Nicknack get out and into his boat.
- Toyota Crown: Osato's hitmen were seen in a Crown; this was the car that was picked up using an electromagnet on a CH-47 helicopter, later dumped into Tokyo Bay.
- Triumph Stag: In Diamonds Are Forever, Connery is seen early in the movie driving a yellow Stag to Amsterdam, while posing as diamond smuggler Peter Franks.
- Triumph TR3: Owned by Tilly Masterton in novel, she uses it to pursue Goldfinger across France. Bond later rams this car with his Aston Martin.
- ZIL-41047: Featured briefly in the film The Living Daylights, two of these cars are seen driving across Tangier, with Bond in pursuit. One of the cars is carrying the Russian General Pushkin.
Other vehicles
Trains
Aircraft
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
Dr. No | Boeing 707 | Pan Am | A Pan Am 707 lands in Seattle |
From Russia With Love | Hiller UH -12 "Raven" helicopter | Rosa Klebb | |
Goldfinger | Lockheed JetStar[37] | Auric Goldfinger | |
Hiller 12E4 | Auric Goldfinger (helicopter with atomic bomb) | Still flying today in the UK (G-ASAZ) |
Aviation Traders Carvair | British United Air Ferries | |
Thunderball | Avro Vulcan[38] | RAF | |
SAR Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress | CIA | |
Bell 47J Ranger | CIA | |
You Only Live Twice | 'Little Nellie'/Wallis WA-116 Agile Series 1 gyroplane[39] | James Bond | Little Nellie was flown, in the film, by its builder, Wing Commander Ken Wallis. Following the movie Ken Wallis toured airshows with G-ARZB. Trailered behind his Rolls Royce he put on an entertaining stunt show, usually involving the pursuit and shooting up of a scrap car containing his assistants, posing as villains. 'Little Nellie' was totally destroyed, at just such an airshow, in Newtownards,N.Ireland on June 7, 1986. Ken Wallis walked away unhurt. |
Space Capsule | USSR, NASA | |
Bird One | SPECTRE | Used by SPECTRE for intercept and capture of US and Russian spacecraft |
Kawasaki KV-107II | Tiger Tanaka | |
Meyers 200 | Helga Brandt | |
Brantly B-2 | SPECTRE (flying in and out of the volcano) | |
Lockheed Hercules | Japanese Navy (seen deploying life rafts after the SPECTRE lair is destroyed) | |
On Her Majesty's Secret Service | Bell 206/Bell 204
| Ernst Stavro Blofeld/Marc-Ange Draco | |
Diamonds Are Forever | Boeing 707 | Lufthansa | Bond and Tiffany Case (unknowingly being pursued by Wint and Kidd) fly from Amsterdam to Los Angeles with Peter Franks' corpse in the cargo hold being used to smuggle the diamonds. |
Bell 204 | Willard Whyte & CIA | The fleet of helicopters used to stage the raid on Blofeld's oil rig base in Baja California |
Live And Let Die | Boeing 747-100 | Pan Am | Bond flies from London to New York Kennedy Airport to begin the mission. |
Cessna 170A | Bleaker Flying School | Stolen by Bond escaping from Kananga's henchmen in a chase through Bleaker's hangar. Several other similar aircraft are destroyed in the chase. |
The Man with the Golden Gun | Republic RC-3 Seabee | James Bond | |
AMC Matador – Flying car | Francisco Scaramanga | |
Moonraker | Handley Page Jetstream | Jaws | |
Space Shuttle | Hugo Drax | |
Lockheed L-188 Electra | Hugo Drax/Drax Air Freight | |
Concorde | Air France | Used by Bond to fly to Rio de Janeiro |
Rockwell OV-101 - Space Shuttle Enterprise | NASA/United States Space Marine Force | |
Boeing 747 - Space Shuttle Carrier | NASA | |
For Your Eyes Only | Bell 206 JetRanger | MI6 | The Chaplain said sent by Universal Exports, but owned by Blofeld, as he states when remotely takes over the helicopter, "do not worry about the pilot he was one of my less useful people" |
PZL Mi-2 | General Gogol | |
Octopussy | Acrostar Jet[40] | James Bond | Bede BD5J kitbuilt mini-jet. Originally owned and flown by the Budweiser beer company, later crashed following an engine fire. The pilot, Bob Bishop, bailed out and survived unhurt. The folding wing model seen exiting the horse-box was a mock-up. |
Beechcraft 'Twin Beech' | Kamal Khan | |
Hot Air Balloon | MI6 - Q Branch | |
A View To A Kill | Blimp | Max Zorin | |
The Living Daylights | Hawker Siddeley Nimrod | RAF | |
British Aerospace Harrier T.10 | MI6 | |
Lockheed Hercules | M | |
Gen. Koskov | |
Licence to Kill | Piper PA-18 Super Cub | Isthmus City Airport | Stolen by Pam Bouvier, this plane was used by her to fly to Sanchez's Olympiatec Meditation Institute and later to fly Bond to one of the tankers during the climactic truck chase. |
de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver | Franz Sanchez | |
Learjet 45 | Franz Sanchez | |
GoldenEye | Cessna 172 Skyhawk | Jack Wade (on loan from US DEA) | Shot down by surface-to-air missile over Cuba |
Eurocopter Tiger | French Navy | |
Mikoyan MiG-29 | Russian Air Force | |
Pilatus PC-6 | Russian chemical producers | |
Tomorrow Never Dies | Aero L-39 Albatros | Central Asian terrorists | Equipped with a nuclear torpedo. Bond pilots the Albatros in order to fly the torpedo out of the terrorist base so that it won't be detonated by the on-route cruise missile which was launched by the British Navy. Bond utilizes the Albatros' weapons systems in order to facilitate his escape. Bond successfully takes off but he is followed into the air by another pilot(also in an Albatros) who is in pursuit of Bond and a Dog fight ensues which Bond wins. |
Die Another Day | Switchblades - PHASST (Programmable High Altitude Single Soldier Transport)[41] | US Military | |
Boeing 747-400 | British Airways | Bond flies back to London whilst on the run after escaping to Hong Kong. |
Antonov An-124 on the outside, Ilyushin Il-76 when they're in the plane | North Korea | |
Quantum of Solace | Douglas DC-3 | Unnamed Bolivian civilian | Actually, two separate Dakotas were used in the filming. This short sequence demanded the use of two locations, so far apart that it was considered expedient to use two aircraft. Both were stripped back to bare aluminium and made to look identical, for continuity purposes. |
Skyfall | AgustaWestland AW101 | Unnamed henchmen | Appears and attacks the Skyfall Manor House in Scotland |
Skyfall | Augusta Westland Wildcat | Royal Navy |
Three appear over the abandoned city after bond shows them the radio transmitter he used |
Novel | Aircraft | Owner | Notes |
Live and Let Die,Diamonds Are Forever, Goldfinger | Boeing 377 Stratocruiser | BOAC, Auric Goldfinger | 007 takes Stratocruiser on his journeys to America. In Goldfinger the final battle is set on-board this plane. |
Diamonds Are Forever | English Electric Canberra | RAF | This is the plane that takes Bond to Sierra Leone |
From Russia with Love |
Ilyushin Il-12 | N\A | This is the plane that takes Red Grant from Crimea to Moscow |
Vickers Viscount | N\A | This is the plane that takes Bond to Istanbul |
Diamonds Are Forever, Dr No |
Lockheed G Super Constellation | TWA | This is the plane that takes Bond and Tiffany from LA via Chicago to NYC |
Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation | N\A | This is the plane that takes Bond to Jamaica |
Goldfinger |
Bristol Freighter | N\A | Transports Goldfinger's Rolls-Royce to France |
Beechcraft Model 18 | Goldfinger | Goldfinger uses this plane for air surveillance of Fort Knox |
For Your Eyes Only | de Havilland Comet | N\A | Bond takes this plane to Canada instead of old Stratocruiser |
Thunderball | Grumman Amphibian | Bond and Leiter | The two use this plane in search of a missing bomber |
On Her Majesty's Secret Service |
Sud Aviation Caravelle | Swissair | This is the plane that takes Bond from London to Zurich |
Aerospatiale Alouette III | SPECTRE | This is the helicopter that takes Bond to Piz Gloria |
Dassault Mirage | Swiss Air Force | This is the plane that intercepts Helicopter bound to attack Piz Gloria |
You Only Live Twice | Douglas DC-8 | Japan Airlines | This is the plane that takes Bond to Tokyo |
- Bell Rocket Belt
Featured in Thunderball. A rocket pack based on the Bell Jet belt. Bell helicopters had previously been seen in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Diamonds Are Forever, Live and Let Die, The Spy Who Loved Me, and Moonraker.
- Skyfleet S570
A "prototype" plane featured in Casino Royale, actually a Boeing 747-200 originally used by British Airways as "G-BDXJ". It was refitted with two mockup engines on each inner pylon and external fuel tanks on the outer pylons, somewhat anachronistically resembling a B-52 Stratofortress. This aircraft survives, permanently grounded and repainted plain white, at Dunsfold Aerodrome, England, where all the airfield action was filmed.[42]
Marine vehicles
Film |
Vehicle |
Owner |
Notes |
From Russia With Love | Speedboat | Red Grant (later James Bond and Tatiana Romanova) | |
Thunderball | Disco Volante | Emilio Largo | The name means "Flying Saucer" in Italian. Consists of two parts: a frontal hydrofoil craft, and a rear "cocoon" section equipped with weapons to slow and distract pursuers. |
You Only Live Twice | Ning Po Cargo Ship | Osato Chemicals/SPECTRE | |
Unidentified British Submarine | Royal Navy/MI6 | |
HMS Tenby (F65) | Royal Navy | |
Diamonds Are Forever | Mountbatten class (SR.N4) Hovercraft | Seaspeed | |
Bathosub | Ernst Stavro Blofeld | |
SS Canberra | P&O Cruises | |
Live and Let Die | Glastron GT-150 | Dr. Kananga | Stolen by Bond from Dr. Kananga's "crocodile farm" drug factory |
Glastron CV-19 Jet speedboat | Deke Rodgers | Stolen by Bond after the GT-150 is disabled by gunfire |
Glastron V-156 Sportster | Dr. Kananga henchmen | One of these boats is disabled after crashing into a tree, another being simply outrun by Bond and Kananga henchman Adam |
Glastron V-184 Crestflite | Dr. Kananga henchmen | This boat gets stuck in a wedding tent |
Glastron V-162 Futura | Dr. Kananga henchmen | This boat is destroyed when it spears Sheriff J.W. Pepper's car while attempting to jump over an embankment |
Glastron V-145 Fireflite | Dr. Kananga henchmen | This boat ended up in Deke Rodger's swimming pool |
Glastron-Carlson CV21 Jet speedboat | Louisiana wildlife park ranger Billy-Bob | Stolen by Kananga henchman Adam and destroyed when driven into the back of a derelict ship and explodes. |
The Spy Who Loved Me | Speedboat | Stromberg Shipping Lines | |
SS Liparus Oil Tanker | Stromberg Shipping Lines | |
Lotus Esprit S1 – Wet Nellie submarine | Q-Branch/James Bond | |
Wetbike | Q-Branch/James Bond | |
Submarines | Soviet, British, and American Governments | HMS Ranger, Potemkin, and USS Wayne |
HMS Fearless | Royal Navy | |
Moonraker | Gondola-hovercraft[43] | Q-Branch/James Bond | |
Glastron CV23HT hydrofoil boat | Q-Branch/James Bond | Used by Bond to locate Hugo Drax's Amazon river source for the deadly nerve gas |
Glastron SSV-189 speedboats | Drax Enterprises | Used by Drax henchmen during the Amazon river chase |
For Your Eyes Only | HMS St. Georges | MI6 Intelligence Surveillance Ship | |
SS Colombina | Milos Columbo | |
Triano | Timothy Havelock, later Melina Havelock | |
Neptune | Timothy Havelock, later Melina Havelock | Used by Sir Timothy for underwater research |
Octopussy | Alligator Boat | Q-Branch/James Bond | |
A View To A Kill | Iceberg | MI6 | |
Glastron Carlson C-537 | Max Zorin | Used to retrieve Mayday on the Seine after the assassination of Achille Aubergine |
Licence to Kill | SS Wavekrest | Milton Krest | |
Sentinel Mini Sub | Milton Krest | |
GoldenEye | La Fayette class frigate | French Navy | |
Tomorrow Never Dies | Sea Shadow | Elliot Carver | |
HMS Devonshire | Royal Navy | |
HMS Bedford | Royal Navy | |
HMS Chester | Royal Navy | |
The World is Not Enough | Q's retirement recreational boat | Q | Weapons systems: At least 2 torpedo's and grenade launcher.
Bond fires 2 torpedo's at an assassin's boat, destroying it.
The boat has a single jet engine to assist in propulsion. |
Unidentified Russian Victor III class submarine | Russian Navy | |
Novel | Vehicle | Owner | Note |
Live and Let Die | Secatur | Mr Big | Luxurious black yacht with grey superstructure built in 1947 for a certain millionaire, later acquired by Mr Big who uses it for smuggling gold coins from Jamaica to the USA. 70 foot (21 m) long, powered by twin General Motor Diesels and capable of doing 20 knots. Bond destroys it with the limpet mine killing everyone aboard including Mr Big in the novel's climax. |
Diamonds Are Forever | RMS Queen Elizabeth | Cunard Line | Liner that takes Bond and Tiffany across the Atlantic |
For Your Eyes Only | Chris Craft Constellation | Major Gonzales and his henchmen | Described as a glittering 50 ton Chris Craft, it is used by the Gonzales and his men to sail from Jamaica to Cuba after murdering Havelocks. Judging by the weight spec mentioned in the story it is probably the Constellation model |
Risico | Colombina | Enrico Colombo | 200 tons former fishing vessel with a sail Colombo uses for his smuggling operations in the Adriatic. It's battle with the Kristatos's ship is the novel climax. |
The Hildebrand Rarity | Wawekrest | Milton Krest | Luxurious white yacht owned by an rude American millionaire Krest who uses it for his voyages around a world as well as for his hunt of rare fish specimens for his foundation. Built by Bronson Shipbuilding Corporation and designed by Rosenblatts. Specifications: Length 100 ft (30,48 m), Width 21 ft (6,4 m), Weight 200 t, Two 500 horsepower Superior diesel engines, double propellers, top speed 14 knots. As Bond remarks after seeing it:"It was a real ship, built to cruise the world and not just Florida Keys" |
SS Kampala | British India Steam Navigation Company | The ship that took Bond to Seychelles and the one he was waiting for to return him to Mombasa at the beginning of the story. |
Thunderball | Disco Volante | Emilio Largo\SPECTRE | Hydrofoil white and dark blue yacht, purchased with SPECTRE funds for 200.000 pounds and used for the purposes of operation Omega by Emilio Largo. Built by Cantieri Navali Rodriquez from Messina. specifications: weight 100 t, powered by two Daimler-Benz four-stroke Diesels supercharged by twin Brown-Boveri turbo superchargers, top speed about 50 knots, equipped with Decca Navigator System. The yacht's hull has a hidden hatch like Olterra which is used to smuggle atomic bombs on board. |
U.S. submarine Manta | United States Navy | U.S. nuclear George Washington-class submarine used by Bond and Leiter in their pursuit after Disco Volante. |
Underwater chariot | SPECTRE | Used for transporting the bombs from the underwater cave to the Disco Volante |
The Man with the Golden Gun | Chris Craft Roamer | Francisco Scaramanga | 40 foot (12 m) boat that Scaramanga intends to use for deep-sea fishing in order to entertain his mobster guests |
See also
References
- Inline
- ↑ "Alfa Romeo GTV6". jamesbondlifestyle.com. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ Moore, Malcolm (28 April 2008). "James Bond filming suspended after third accident leaves stuntman in coma". Daily Telegraph (London). Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ Fleming, Ian (2002). Moonraker. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-200206-3. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "1974 AMC Hornet X in The Man with the Golden Gun". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ McGeer, Bonnie (17 November 2006). "Aston Martin DBS set for silver screen". Forbes Autos. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
Original page was titled: "Honorable Mentions - AMC Hornet", dated 9 November 2006 at www.forbesautos.com/advice/toptens/bond-cars/02-honorable-mentions/05-amc-hornet.html and was retrieved on 13 September 2008
- ↑ "1974 AMC Hornet". National Motor Museum Trust - Museum in Beaulieu, UK. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "James Bond's AMC Hornet Located!". AMCHornet.com. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 "Trivia for The Man with the Golden Gun". The Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "m-hvosm - McHenry Highway Vehicle Object Simulation Model - Astro Spiral". McHenry Software. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 "A Chronological History of the James Bond Film Vehicles #6. Flying Cars in The Man with the Golden Gun". www.carenthusiast.com. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Bond in Motion". National Motor Museum, Beaulieu. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "1974 AMC Matador Coupe in The Man with the Golden Gun". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ Tannert, Chuck. "Top 10: getaway cars (AMC Matador in The Man with the Golden Gun)". MSN Autos. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "1974 AMC Matador Sedan in The Man with the Golden Gun". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "1978 AMC Concord D/L Wagon in Moonraker". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Trivia for Moonraker (1979)". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Jeep Cherokee in A View to a Kill". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "1976 AMC Jeep CJ-7 in Licence to Kill". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Jeep Cherokee in Tomorrow Never Dies, Movie, 1997". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "UK | James Bond car sold for over £1m". BBC News. 21 January 2006. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Specially Equipped Silver Aston Martin First Driven by Sean Connery Sells for $4.1M in London". Artdaily.org. 28 October 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ Hardiman, Paul (1 February 2011). "1964 Aston Martin DB5 James Bond". Sports Car Market. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Aston Martin could make 007 return". BBC News. 19 July 2001. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "First Aston Martins to be made outside UK". Reuters. 4 March 2008. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "The Company - News". Aston Martin. 2006-01-16. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ↑ Barbara Broccoli, Pierce Brosnan, Martin Campbell, Chris Corbould, Famke Janssen, Peter Lamont, Izabella Scorupco, Michael G. Wilson (1994). GoldenEye: Building a Better Bond (Theatrical Teaser). MGM Home Entertainment.
- ↑ "Tomorrow Never Dies (Ultimate Edition)". DVD Times. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "Jaguar XKR convertible". National Motor Museum Trust - Museum in Beaulieu, UK. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 29.2 "Jaguar and Land Rover Announce Partnership with Spectre the 24th James Bond Adventure". Retrieved 13 February 2015.
- ↑ "Lotus Esprit S1". National Motor Museum Trust - Museum in Beaulieu, UK. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
- ↑ "James Bond's 'Spy Who Loved me' submarine car sold in London". Reuters. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
- ↑ "Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith Limousine Park Ward [LELW21] in "From Russia with Love, 1963"". IMCDb.org. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ↑ "1967 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow I Two-Door Convertible Mulliner Park-Ward in "On Her Majesty's Secret Service, 1969"". IMCDb.org. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ↑ Cox, John (2004-03-08). "The Silver Beast". CommanderBond.net. Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ "SpyZone Security, Surveillance, & Counter Surveillance". Spyzone.com. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ↑ "1992 Lamborghini Diablo". Internet Movie Cars Database. Retrieved 2013-01-11.
- ↑ Pfeiffer, Lee; Worrall, Dave (1999). The Essential Bond. Boxtree Ltd. pp. 33–43. ISBN 978-0-7522-2477-0.
- ↑ Laming, Tim (1993). The Vulcan Story. Arms and Armour. ISBN 978-1-85409-148-2.
- ↑ You Only Live Twice Ultimate Edition DVD (Media notes). 2006.
- ↑ "Episode 2". Main Hoon Bond. Season 1. Episode 2. 54 minutes in. Star Gold.
- ↑ "Bond Flies PHASST" (Press release). Kinetic Aerospace. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ Swanson (2007-03-11). first=Molly "Boeing 747 in Casino Royale". Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ↑ Hilditch, Nick (2001-07-27). "Films - review - Moonraker". BBC. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- General
- Jackson, Murray. "James Bond's cars". Autos Canada. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- Greatest James Bond Films list of Vehicles, Gadgets, Love-making, etc., retrieved on January 5, 2008.
- Bond in Motion at The National Motor Museum
- James Bond 007 "The Films and the Vehicles" page supplied by BMW AG, retrieved on January 5, 2008.
- IMCDb.org - Internet Movie Cars Database
- The Complete Guide To James Bond's Cars (Video) November 30, 2011
- Topgear, 50 years of Bond cars
- Awesome collection of all James Bond Cars
External links