00:00Growing up watching James Bond, I always loved the action, the gadgets and of course, the
00:17cars. Goldfinger is no exception, full of iconic moments. So naturally, when we were
00:22given the brief to design Phantom Goldfinger, it was really exciting.
00:27The film features a 1937 Rolls Royce Phantom Sedanca de Ville, used by Bond's nemesis
00:33Ulrich Goldfinger to smuggle gold out of England.
00:41With Phantom Goldfinger, we wanted to design a modern interpretation, an evolution of the
00:45original, whilst also recalling key memorable scenes from the film.
00:52The car contains a host of whimsical features, which in some cases have been playfully hidden
00:57to echo how Goldfinger conceals the gold in the coachwork of his Rolls Royce.
01:02So for example, the Spirit of Ecstasy has been given a unique gold plated finish on
01:07select areas of her body that gives the illusion that it's been worn back and there's solid
01:11gold underneath. It's quite subtle and not something you realise at first glance, partially
01:16because your eyes are drawn to the striking yellow paint scheme, which is colour matched
01:20to the original.
01:24One key Rolls Royce moment in the film is when Bond is following Goldfinger driving
01:29along the Furkapass in Switzerland. Here we've designed a phantom gallery that features an
01:34artistic, ice-aligned map of the Swiss Alps, with the Furkapass highlighted by a slither
01:39of gold. The clocks around at the centre is inspired by the gun barrel opening sequence
01:45of Goldfinger and many subsequent Bond films. Another subtle reference to this scene is
01:50the golden hue constellation depicted in the Starlight Headliner, which references
01:54the day that the Furkapass scene was shot, the 11th of July 1964. The film's storyline
02:00can also be found on the inside of the picnic tables, where we've recreated, through a gold
02:05inlay, a fictional map of Fort Knox, the US gold reserves which Goldfinger plans to attack
02:10in the film. To complement this storyline is also an 18 carat solid gold speed form
02:15housed inside the centre console of the car, as if it was secured in a vault.
02:20Throughout the car we've placed a few fun easter eggs. For example, there's a small
02:24device in the boot designed to look like a tracking device Bond places in the rear of
02:28Goldfinger's Rolls Royce, to trace him to his smelting plant in Switzerland. Here it
02:33acts as a projector for the 007 logo. Inside the boot lid we've mounted a gold-plated golf
02:38putter, which references the first meeting of Goldfinger and Bond during a round of golf.
02:44The head of the club is adorned with a monogram, AG, matching that found on Goldfinger's signet
02:48ring.
02:50Phantom Goldfinger stands to be our most ambitious and creative one-off project to date, a fitting
02:55tribute to the legacy of a classic Bond film.
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