Here’s how we rate the top 10 Bond cars.
One of Bond’s rare outings in an American-made car, which featured in not only one of the most famous scenes in Bond’s history but also received a world record for the first astro spiral used in a movie; a computer-designed stunt captured in one take when Bond performs a corkscrew jump over a broken bridge in Thailand.
For Roger Moore’s fifth outing as Bond, filmmakers wanted a more traditional return to form after the sci-fi plot of Moonraker and decided to feature not just one, but two British-made Lotus Esprits. A white one which features an anti-theft self-destruct feature (handy), and the second, a more iconic copper model which Bond drives to Cortina in Spain. Originally white like the first, filmmakers sent it back to Lotus who repainted it copper with gold stripes so it would stand out against the snow better.
Although this car is most famous for being spectacularly sliced in half in half by a helicopter wielding an enormous circular saw, the German-made Z8 is actually a rather lovely and stylish model. With titanium plating and armour it was equally swanky on the inside with a steering wheel target display, a remote-control keyring and that ultimate essential, six different cup holders.
Bond wasn’t always about the Bentleys and Aston Martins; in fact 007’s first-ever car was a humble, British-made Sunbeam Alpine that he rents in Jamaica in Dr. No. On a leisurely drive up to the lovely (albeit double-crossing) Miss Taro’s house in the Blue Mountains, Bond is pursued by the Three Blind Mice assassins in a hearse but upon coming across a crane in the road, the nifty Sunbeam darts underneath, outwitting the hearse, which careens down the mountain to a fiery end.
This modern classic was of the last generation of Aston Martins to be based on the original DBS design. Elegant, with gun-metal finish and curves in all the right places, even without Q’s ingenious flourishes the car is a masterpiece, and the gadgets are pretty amazing too…
Product placement at its peak, the grand tourer V12 Vanquish was the official car of Die Another Day. The front-firing rockets, two machine guns and spike-producing tires were sadly not included in the standard model. The car also featured a cloaking device and passenger ejector seat which Bond uses in a moment of inspiration to flip the car when it has overturned in a chase.
Ever the trendsetter, Goldfinger was the first film to feature the Ford Mustang when Tilly Masterson drove it in through the Swiss Alps – it later became famous for its role in the ten minute San Francisco car chase in the Steve McQueen heist epic Bullitt. In Diamonds are Forever, Bond took the Mustang to new levels when, during a police car chase in Las Vegas, he drives the car up a ramp and on only two wheels manoeuvres it down a narrow alley.