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    Affichage des articles dont le libellé est James Bond inspiration – the ‘Goldfinger Aston’ for sale. Afficher tous les articles
    Affichage des articles dont le libellé est James Bond inspiration – the ‘Goldfinger Aston’ for sale. Afficher tous les articles

    mardi 8 juillet 2014

    James Bond inspiration – the ‘Goldfinger Aston’ for sale


    This car’s history is far more intriguing than ‘merely’ a car used in the filming of a James Bond movie. For this actual car, says Coys, was the real-life inspiration for Ian Fleming’s decision to swap 007’s Bentley for an Aston Martin, albeit a DB Mark III, in his seventh Bond novel, Goldfinger.

    Sifting through the evidence

    Here is the evidence: the Aston Martin DB 2/4 Mk I Vantage, chassis number LML-819, was delivered new on 4 July 1955 to the Honorable Sqdr. Ldr. Phillip Ingram Cunliffe-Lister DSO, best known for his heroic RAF service during WWII – as a Spitfire fighter pilot and the Commanding Office of a Mosquito Bomber Squadron. But it was Ingram Cunliffe-Lister’s father who had more of a James Bond persona. Coys tells us that he was Lord Swinton, the 1st Earl, a close confidant of Winston Churchill and head of MI5 and the Security Executive during WWII. 
    More to the point, he was Ian Fleming’s boss.

    Parked at the studios

    Fleming would have had plenty of opportunity to become acquainted with the car, as it was often parked at Hope Bay Studios in Kent, where the author – a nearby resident – located the HQ of Sir Hugo Drax in the Bond novel Moonraker. And in case you still doubt the car’s place in Bond history, the new Aston Martin was used by Ingram Cunliffe-Lister to compete in international rallies and hence it was fitted with such ‘extras’ as reinforced steel bumpers, concealed lockers, a heavy-duty anti-interference ignition system, driver’s seat connections for two-way radio (or a homing device) – and a Halda Speed Pilot… gadgets which appeared on Bond’s car in the Goldfinger novel. Though not in the film, of course, where he famously drove a DB5.

    Inspiration for the Goldfinger Aston Martin

    Even without this compelling history, a DB 2/4 Mk I Vantage is a glorious car to own but, with this example’s extensive history file highlighting the evidence that it was the inspiration for the Goldfinger Aston Martin, it is a unique object of desire.
    The 1954 Aston Martin DB2 in question will be auctioned in Coys' upcoming Blenheim Palace sale on 12 July 2014. It can currently be found in the Classic Driver Market.