RE: James Bond's Aston Martin DB5 | Driven

RE: James Bond's Aston Martin DB5 | Driven

Thursday 20th February 2020

James Bond's Aston Martin DB5 | PH Review

We get behind the wheel of 007's very own DB5, but it's not the only classic Aston the super spy has at his disposal...



You can almost certainly name the brands that James Bond tells the time with, drinks shaken over ice and wears in a holster under his dinner jacket, but the most well-known product associated with Britain's most famous secret agent is undoubtedly his choice of car. In Ian Fleming's books Commander Bond started out with a love for vintage Bentleys - and in the 'nineties he went through that strange BMW period - but if people know anything about 007 it is likely to be that he drives an Aston.

The association goes back to 1964's Goldfinger, when Sean Connery drove a very early DB5 with various lethal gadgets, none of which stopped him from being captured when he crashed into a wall. Amazing as it now seems, Eon Productions had to talk a reluctant Aston Martin into lending the cars. There have been DB5s in other Bond films, many of them small cameos, but for his 25th official outing, No Time To Die, it has been elevated to become a star performer again.


The DB5 will feature in an extended chase sequence at the beginning of the new film, shot in the Italian city of Matera, which also shows it to have been given a substantial weapons upgrade over the twin Browning machine-guns that Connery's car was packing. As you can imagine, this posed the film's makers a serious challenge, with the price of a decent Bond-spec DB5 being somewhere around the million quid mark and its limited athleticism meaning it is hardly cut out for bash-and-crash sequences in narrow streets. The answer was both simple and complicated at the same time - the creation of a convincing, but much more dynamically capable replica.

Having agreed supplying vehicles, Aston had just six months to engineer, build and deliver the eight cars needed for filming. The company piggybacked the project onto the parallel decision to create the 'continuation' DB5 Goldfinger edition, which had already required the scanning of an original car to create new bodywork. The same data was used for moulds to allow carbon fibre body panels to be made for the stunt replicas. These were then fitted to steel space frame chassis with donated six-cylinder running gear - more on that later - as well as roll cages, hydraulic handbrakes and fire extinguishers.


Which brings the story to Silverstone on Valentine's Day, where all the romance is on the track. Out on the main circuit the 2020 Mercedes W11 Formula 1 car is noisily making its dynamic debut, cameras and drones capturing its every move. But on the baby Stowe circuit that now serves as Aston's high performance test track, there's an even more compelling sight, with Aston having assembled various models associated with No Time To Die: a DBS Superleggera, an '80s V8 saloon similar to the one in The Living Daylights - which also gets its own cameo - and no fewer than four silver birch DB5s.

Two of these are real and two are replicas, and trying to tell them apart is a fun challenge. One of the stunt cars is made obvious by a plastic wrap carrying the simulated damage that the car is meant to have picked up during its chase in Italy. And one of the originals is the Goldfinger continuation prototype, and therefore carrying a full set of replica gadgets - including the bulkier rotating number plates - making it easy to spot. But the other two - one original, one deepfake - are close to identical.


For the record, there are some modest differences. The radiator grille of the replica comes fractionally further forwards, the bezels around its headlights are different, the silver strips down the front wing vents are fractionally longer and it also has guttering, something the original car is missing. You'll also notice the windscreen doesn't quite fit at the edges. From the outside and ten feet away, though, the only obvious difference - visible only from some angles - is the presence of a hefty roll cage in the stunt car.

First up, I get the chance for a few laps in the V8 Saloon - as Aston called its coupes back then. This is superb, with a comical seating position that is both high and cramped, plus a slightly startling turn of pace as the huge engine rumbles its way down the longer straights while I reacquaint myself with a dog-leg gearbox. Lateral grip is limited, but it's the brakes that really sap enthusiasm for quicker stuff, feeling tired after a couple of semi-hard stops. No matter, it is a truly awesome thing and while The Living Daylights is some way off my list of favourite Bond films, I have to admit that Timothy Dalton did get one of the franchise's coolest cars.


But I'm mostly here for the DB5s, with the plan being to follow the advice of No Time To Die's senior stunt driver on the order to do them in. Former British Rally Champion Mark Higgins has become one of the industry's go-to talents for high performance precision driving, having worked on the last four Bond films - and already moved onto the next Batman movie - and advises me to drive the real DB5 first. "Trust me, you want to experience the new one last."

The proper DB5 is a definite tick on the bucket list, with a dashboard that seems to be equal parts black metal and chrome-bezelled instruments, and an uncompromising driving position requiring knees to fit around the unadjustable wooden-rimmed steering wheel. The gearshift seems almost impossibly dainty - I remember my granny's Austin 1100 having something very similar - and the floor-hinged pedals are massively offset. It sounds great, wuffly low down and rortier further up, and performance is impressively keen; something in marked contrast to both the limited retardation and the massively heavy unassisted steering. Front end responses are more gum than bite and body roll is copious, but the really scary moment is the one when my foot finds the clutch where it's expecting the brake pedal to be and the Armco seems to be accelerating towards me in somebody else's seven-figure classic. Fortunately I find the true middle pedal in time to make the corner with not much to spare, but I'm back in the pitlane very shortly afterwards. The real DB5 is definitely best experienced on road rather than track.


The replica feels much more intimidating at first, thanks to the need to clamber in over a fat rollcage and end up strapped into a proper competition-grade carbon fibre bucket. There's no niceness in here - the dashboard is unfinished as a cosmetically perfect original car would be used for interior shots. There's no heating or ventilation system either, something Higgins admits was an issue when working in 40-degree temperatures in Italy last year. Instrumentation is limited to a speedo and rev counter, there's an AP racing pedal box in the footwell and the similar wooden rimmed steering wheel has been positioned further back and lower. There's also a hydraulic handbrake that I'm ordered not to try and use, plus a bulbous gear shifter with a familiar shape that quickly negates Aston's official refusal to say where the powertrain has been donated from.

Between the lever and Aston's admission that the motor is a naturally aspirated straight-six producing around 340hp, it's not hard to produce a list of candidates; the fact there's a definite sensation of cams shifting to a more aggressive profile at higher revs is another broad hint. Put all that together and you're left with a shortlist of approximately one.


Regardless of where the powerplant comes from, the driving experience is properly special - a complete contrast to both the original car but also the presuppositions you make about something that looks so grand and staid. The replica DB5 is pure hooligan, with a 1,000kg weight and much stiffer structure giving it a serious turn of pace, plus suspension through twin wishbones at each corner with rallycross-derived springs and dampers. Steering is hydraulically assisted and feels absolutely connected, there's none of the heave or slowness of the original car and responses are as sharp as Erno Goldfinger's genital-threatening laser. There's a surprising abundance of mechanical grip considering both the narrow period-look tyres (which use motorsport grade compounds), but also the need for sideways action in the film. Yet it doesn't take much effort to discover the potential for plenty of that, too - the replica DB5 easily powered into what feel like impressive slides. Somewhere nearby Lewis Hamilton is driving the new Merc F1 car for the first time, but I'm pretty certain that I'm having more fun hooning James Bond's Aston.

It takes a passenger ride with Mark Higgins to show how much more the replica is capable of, with a lap of Stowe mostly conducted at the sort of speeds and angles a professional drifter would be proud of. Higgins reckons that repeatability is the core skill for any stunt driver - the need to hit marks and deliver the same sequence again and again. He's spent hundreds of hours in stunt cars doing just that, sometimes even driving them through what is known as the "pod" - with electronic throttle, brake and steering communication, normally mounted on the roof - to allow Craig and co-star Léa Seydoux to deliver lines while being driven at speed.


Of course, the DB5 sequence is only going to be one part of what promises to be the longest and most expensive Bond film yet - the new Land Rover Defender also has a separate sizeable role of its own. But the return of the car that started it all is going to be one of the stand-out features, not least as the scene in Matera ends with the Aston sprouting multi-barrelled miniguns from behind its headlights, blasting a surrounding mob of baddies through the simple expedient of a massive tyre-smoking donut. Even at outrageous multiplex prices that's got to be worth most of the cost of admission by itself.

As for what happens to the stunt DB5s, a mostly peaceful retirement based around promotional work and museum exhibition seems to be on the cards. A shame, because I reckon we've got the basis for what would undoubtedly be the most exciting one-make historic racing series in the world right here. Bagsie me the one with the gadgets.












Author
Discussion

Billy_Whizzzz

Original Poster:

2,005 posts

143 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
N/A straight 6 with 340hp... S54?

cookie1600

2,109 posts

161 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Two cars with the same registration? I say ringer!!!!

ds666

2,631 posts

179 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Spot on - they are based on e46 m3's

Fishlegs

2,982 posts

139 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?

GTEYE

2,094 posts

210 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
My claim to fame is having sat in the actual original Goldfinger car when I was a toddler, and the car was returned to Aston Martin works - my dad worked there. A pity I don't actually remember it personally!

The original Goldfinger car was apparently bought by the film company as a standard car, converted with the various gadgets, and then after film duties were complete was returned to be reconverted back to standard production spec.

The story was that the car was then re-sold and the various modifications were then reinstated by the new owner!


anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Is AM the only brand that isn't made more lame by the JB association?


PhantomPH

4,043 posts

225 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Fishlegs said:
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?
Whilst I get your point, he's leaning on a replica vehicle which is essentially a movie prop. It has simulated (and no doubt some genuine) damage all over it and will likely wind up in the corner of an iffy 'museum' in the back end of nowhere (or perhaps even crushed) when finished with. Not really the end of the world to have a small guy's butt on it for a few moments. winksmile

sidewinder500

1,137 posts

94 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
AM V8 saloon over DB5 all day long for me, simply stunning

Cold

15,236 posts

90 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
PhantomPH said:
Fishlegs said:
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?
Whilst I get your point, he's leaning on a replica vehicle which is essentially a movie prop. It has simulated (and no doubt some genuine) damage all over it and will likely wind up in the corner of an iffy 'museum' in the back end of nowhere (or perhaps even crushed) when finished with. Not really the end of the world to have a small guy's butt on it for a few moments. winksmile
Given that (rally driver and 007 stunt driver) Higgins will have spent the past few months giving those stunt cars complete hell, it's unlikely that sitting on the front of it will affect it much further.

Jon_S_Rally

3,400 posts

88 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
I would love to be passengered my Miggins. I did my BARS test with his brother who was a lovely bloke too. Mark has made a good little niche for himself doing this kind of work, though I do miss seeing him on the stages. Loved the commentary he used to do mid-event, was brilliant.

Fishlegs said:
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?
Because he was told to for the photos? It's a stunt car, not a priceless classic...

Anyway, I lean on my car all the time. It's a car. Unless you are covered in bits of jagged metal, or jump up and down on it, you're not going to hurt it.

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
This will explain why clarkson was driving one on his Instagram.

Bobtherallyfan

1,267 posts

78 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
La Liga said:
Is AM the only brand that isn't made more lame by the JB association?
I beg to differ,

Toyota 2000GT
Lotus Esprit S1
Ford Mustang
Rolls Royce Phantom III
Jaguar CX75

I’d even say Bond managed to make yellow 2CV’ s cool



spikyone

1,450 posts

100 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
That's a lot of trouble to go to for an unnecessary and incongruous movie car. I'll inevitably end up seeing it soon after it's released, but it's pretty depressing that we've gone from the gritty, literary-inspired Bond of Casino Royale to the Bond-by-numbers of Skyfall, Spectre, and now this. They need to just give it a bloody rest with the DB5.

Tin Hat

1,371 posts

209 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
spikyone said:
That's a lot of trouble to go to for an unnecessary and incongruous movie car. I'll inevitably end up seeing it soon after it's released, but it's pretty depressing that we've gone from the gritty, literary-inspired Bond of Casino Royale to the Bond-by-numbers of Skyfall, Spectre, and now this. They need to just give it a bloody rest with the DB5.
Jesus, with an upbeat spirit like that I hope that you aren’t sitting next to me in the cinema.
I can’t wait to see it, the trailer looks fantastic, nicely written article too!

hu8742

237 posts

125 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Anyone else beginning to warm to the Aston V8s?

Feels like those models have been in the shadow of the DB5/6's and they're actually quite handsome things. Manual with the dog-leg gear box please.

Evilex

512 posts

104 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Fishlegs said:
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?
Absolutely this.

And... No mention of Lotus as a Bond car? He had at least 3; One in The Spy Who Loved Me, and two more in For Your Eyes Only.

Turbobanana

6,248 posts

201 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Fishlegs said:
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?
If he was leaning on the boot he'd be out of shot.

thegreenhell

15,274 posts

219 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
Fishlegs said:
GET OFF THE fkING BONNET!

Why do people lean on cars?
He's only copying the original...


Mercutio

207 posts

162 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
No I'm with spikeyone on this .

It's utterly depressing how they seem to continually rehash the classics, inserting them into films regardless of plot in order to "connect" with viewers.

I can't really suspend disbelief and get into the film's plot when I see Bond take out a slower, older, hugely valuable car and start thrashing it around. Just because the marketing guys wanted it in their trailer so people got all warm and fuzzy again.

When Bond drove the DBS in Casino Royale it made sense. He's going to a high stakes poker game and needs to look the part. He needs a vehicle that can do the GT thing but turn on the taps at a second's notice.

He should by rights be in a DBS Superleggera, throughout the movie. This is the car which will make sense according to

- the time period the film is set in
- What his adversaries will be driving and why he needs one to get away or pursue!
- Avoiding pointless nostalgia for nostalgia's sake


Osinjak

5,453 posts

121 months

Thursday 20th February 2020
quotequote all
spikyone said:
That's a lot of trouble to go to for an unnecessary and incongruous movie car. I'll inevitably end up seeing it soon after it's released, but it's pretty depressing that we've gone from the gritty, literary-inspired Bond of Casino Royale to the Bond-by-numbers of Skyfall, Spectre, and now this. They need to just give it a bloody rest with the DB5.
Well aren't you just a barrel of merry chuckles?