Vehicles have played an important role throughout the series of James Bond novels and films. "Q branch" - a division of the British Secret Service which provides equipment to field operatives - has given Bond a wide variety of vehicles with which to evade his enemies. Among the most noteworthy gadgets, Bond has been equipped with various vehicles that have numerous modifications to include expensive weapons systems, anti-pursuit systems, alternative transportation modes, and various other functions.
Automobiles[]
Bentley[]
1930 Bentley 4½ Litre (Blower Bentley) - Featured in the novels Casino Royale, Live and Let Die and Moonraker. The Bentley 4½ Litre is a British sports car built by Bentley Motors and is famous for epitomizing prewar British motor racing. The Blower Bentley was Bond's first vehicle. | |
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 - This Bentley was featured in the novel Thunderball and is Bond's final Bentley. Bond upgrades the engine from a 4.5 liter engine to a 4.9 liter. 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. Bond dubs the car "the locomotive". | |
Bentley 3½ Litre - Featured in the film From Russia with Love. Presented to the public in September 1933, it was the first new Bentley model following Rolls-Royce's acquisition of the Bentley brand in 1931. A drophead 1935 Bentley 3½ Litre was briefly featured in the 1963 movie From Russia with Love as Bond's first Q Branch equipped vehicle. | |
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. | |
Bentley Continental GT (2011) - Bond's car in the novel Carte Blanche. |
Aston Martin[]
Aston Martin DB5 - Featured primarily in Goldfinger. The most famous Bond car of all, it came with all the usual Q Branch refinements which have been copied from movie to movie including bulletproof front and rear panels, oil slick, smoke screen, machine guns, rotating licence plates, telescoping tire slashers, tracer-receiving console and most famously, the passenger ejector seat. While being the most recognized Bond car, it's actually only been featured in eight films (Goldfinger, Thunderball, GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, Casino Royale, and a nod to the Goldfinger version in Skyfall, Spectre and No Time to Die). | |
Aston Martin DB Mark III - Featured in the novel Goldfinger. While referred to as a "DB III", 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. 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 adaptation. | |
Aston Martin DBS - Featured in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. 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. | |
Aston Martin V8 Vantage Volante - Featured in The Living Daylights. A convertible, which was later "winterised" with a hardtop. Came with all the usual refinements including side skis, spiked tires, missiles, hubcap-mounted lasers, rocket propulsion and a self-destruct mechanism. | |
Aston Martin V12 Vanquish - Featured in the Die Another Day. Also dubbed the "Vanish" due to its ability to become invisible to the naked eye. The car is equipped with all the usual refinements including front-firing rockets, hood-mounted target-seeking shotguns, and passenger ejector seat that was a homage to original Aston Martin DB5 from Goldfinger. | |
Aston Martin DBS V12 - Featured in Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace . It has no Gadgets but compartments Containing a suppressed Walther P99, and some medical equipment, including a defibrillator, most likely based on the compartment under the seat in the novel Goldfinger. | |
Aston Martin DB10 - Featured in Spectre. It contained several gadgets including flamethrowers, built in machine guns, an HUD Target Lock, and a driver ejector seat (the gadget also used in the Aston Martin DB5 in Goldfinger). | |
File:Vehicle - Aston Martin DBS Superleggera.png | Aston Martin DBS Superleggera - Featured in No Time to Die. |
Aston Martin Valhalla - Featured in No Time To Die. |
Lotus[]
Lotus Esprit S1 (1976) - Featured in The Spy Who Loved Me. The S1 was fondly referred to as 'Wet Nellie' - a tribute to Bond's autogyro, 'Little Nellie' from You Only Live Twice. As well as being amphibious, the highly armed car has cannons that spray cement on to pursuing vehicles. It also has wheel arches that turn into fins, a small periscope on the roof enabling 007 to navigate at speed underwater and its other weaponry includes a missile launched from its rear deck, mines, sprayed black dye, and torpedoes shot from the front grille. | |
Lotus Turbo Esprit (1980) - Featured in For Your Eyes Only, this vehicle was cosmetically similar to the S1, but mechanically different, as it exhibited no submarine capabilities. It was most notable for its remarkable security system, which detonated and destroyed the car when Gonzales' henchman broke the driver's window in an attempt to force entry into the car. Q Branch provided a second Turbo to Bond - in bronze instead of white - later in the movie. |
BMW[]
File:Vehicle - BMW 7-Series E23.png | BMW 7-Series (E23) - Featured in Octopussy (film), A View to a Kill (film) and GoldenEye (film). |
BMW 520i - Featured in the Gardner novel Win, Lose or Die. During the course of the novel M prohibits Bond from taking his Bentley Mulsanne Turbo and recommends that he opt for a more subtle car from the company car pool; a BMW 520i in unobtrusive dark-blue. | |
BMW Z3 - Featured in GoldenEye. A controversial choice for some Bond purists, it being the first non-British production car to feature in a Bond movie as the spy's primary mode of transport. A convertible, it comes fully equipped with "all the usual refinements" including a self-destruct system and stinger missiles located behind the headlights. The car in the film is only driven briefly in Cuba, and Bond ends up trading it for Jack Wade's plane. | |
BMW 750iL - Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies. Used in Germany, the 750iL could be controlled remotely via Bond's cell phone. Defense mechanisms included a rocket launcher, re-inflating tires, a cable cutting device in the front hood emblem and a caltrop dispenser. The 750iL also came equipped with an advanced security system and a fingerprint-protected safe hidden behind the passenger airbag compartment. | |
BMW R1200 - Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies. Stolen in Saigon, the BMW R1200 motorcycle was used in a chase sequence through the city and was ridden by both James Bond and Wai Lin of the People's Republic of China. | |
BMW Z8 - Featured in The World Is Not Enough. Equipped with "all the usual refinements" including ground to air missiles and a key chain that can control the car remotely. The car is sawn in half by a brush-cutter-equipped helicopter late in the film. So far in the film series, this marks the only occasion when Bond has expressed concern about Q being upset with James wreaking havoc on cars and equipment. Ironically, this takes place after Desmond Llewelyn makes his final appearance on the screen as Q. |
Ford Motor Company (Ford, Lincoln, Mercury)[]
File:Vehicle - Ford Anglia.png | Ford Anglia - Featured in Dr. No (film) and Thunderball (film) |
File:Vehicle - Ford Consul.png | Ford Consul - Featured in Dr. No (film). |
Ford Mustang (First Generation) - featured in handful of the James Bond movies:
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Ford Country Squire - Featured in Goldfinger; used to bring James Bond to Goldfinger's Ranch in Kentucky. | |
1964 Ford Thunderbird - While not an official Bond car, Felix Leiter and his partner from the CIA are driving a Ford Thunderbird in the film Goldfinger. A tracking device similar to the one in Bond's Aston Martin DB5 was incorporated in the car's instrument panel. | |
1964 Lincoln Continental (Fourth Generation) - Featured in Goldfinger. Car driven by Oddjob to take Mr. Solo to the nearby junkyard and kill him there. The car is subsequently crushed into a cube with Solo's body inside. | |
1964 Ford Falcon Ranchero - Featured in Goldfinger. Car driven by Oddjob to transport out the Lincoln Continental that's been crushed into a cube. | |
1969 Mercury Cougar convertible - Featured in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. This car is owned by Tracy Di Vincenzo and features prominently in Bond's escape from Piz Gloria. | |
Ford Thunderbird Landau - Featured in Diamonds Are Forever. Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd use a bronze Thunderbird Landau (Nevada registration NU3680) to collect an unconscious James Bond on the "WW" level of the Whyte House. They put Bond into the trunk and use underground tunnels to take him out of Las Vegas unnoticed. | |
1971 Ford Econoline - Featured in Diamonds Are Forever. Dr. Metz is driving a van which Bonds sneaks into. | |
Ford Taunus Ghia - Featured in The Spy Who Loved Me where Karl Stromberg's thugs are pursuing Bond on a highway in Sardinia (with Jaws as a passenger), Bond sprays grease on the windshield where the car runs off the road - this is where Jaws walks away). | |
1983 Ford LTD - Featured in A View to a Kill. Right after Bonds leaves San Francisco City Hall, this vehicle is briefly seen when Bond follows Stacey on the Embarcadero Freeway later arriving at her mansion. | |
File:Vehicle - Ford Bronco XLT.png | Ford Bronco XLT - Featured in A View to a Kill.
Driven by Chuck Lee, Bond's CIA contact. |
File:Vehicle - Ford Scorpio.png | Ford Scorpio - Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies. Used by Elliot Carver's henchmen during the parking garage action sequence. |
File:Vehicle - Ford Scorpio.png | 1998 Ford Mustang (Fourth Generation) - Featured in 007 Racing. |
Ford GT40 - Featured in Die Another Day. Part of Colonel Moon's car collection that he has at his arms depot. Gets destroyed during Bond's escape. | |
1957 Ford Fairlane 500 Skyliner - Featured in Die Another Day. Classic automobile briefly driven by Bond during his visit to Cuba. A homage to Dr. No when Bond drives a 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air, a classic Ford was used in the film since FoMoCo vehicles (including those from Ford's Premiere Automotive Group) were extensively used. | |
2002 Ford Thunderbird - Featured in Die Another Day. Although only on screen for a short period of time, the vehicle was marketed as a Bond car. In fact Ford created a special "007 edition" of the car. In Bond spirit, only 700 were made. Jinx drives the 2002 Ford Thunderbird up to Graves ice palace. It's unknown what type of gadgets, if any, were installed. | |
2006 Ford Mondeo ST 2.5 MkIV - Featured in Casino Royale. As part of a product placement, Bond drives a Mk IV Mondeo hatchback when he arrives in Nassau. Because the car was required for filming early in 2006, more than a year before it became commercially available, it was hand-built at Ford of Europe's Design Studio in Cologne, Germany and shipped to the Bahamas under a veil of secrecy. | |
File:Vehicle - Ford Bronco II XLT.png | Ford Bronco II XLT - Featured in Quantum of Solace (film). After getting into a boat chase with General Medrano's men, Bond sees the old and run-down Bronco II with an open driver's door and steals it. |
Ford Edge SEL - Featured in Quantum of Solace (film). Dominic Greene owns several black Ford Edges. |
Saab[]
Saab 900 Turbo - Bond's vehicle of choice in many of the John Gardner Bond novels, beginning with Licence Renewed. Dubbed, the "Silver Beast", it is Bond's private vehicle modified by the real-life company Communication Control Systems, Ltd. (CCS) (now called Security Intelligence Technology Group [1]). He also rents a 900 in Nobody Lives For Ever (1986) and No Deals, Mr. Bond (1987). | |
Saab 9000 CD - Featured in The Man from Barbarossa (1991) | |
Saab 9000 CD Turbo - Featured in Never Send Flowers (1993) and SeaFire (1994). |
Rolls-Royce[]
Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith - featured in Dr. No (novel), From Russia with Love (film) and Spectre (film). | |
1937 Rolls-Royce Phantom III - Featured in Goldfinger. Owned by Auric Goldfinger, it was used to smuggle gold by recasting all of the body panels in gold and shipping it from place to place. Often mistakenly called the "Phantom 337" as that is what Connery said in the film. If the car was actually called the "337," Connery probably would have spelled out "three-three-seven," as the British commonly do. | |
Rolls-Royce Corniche - Featured in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. In On Her Majesty's Secret Service, a Corniche is owned by Marc-Ange Draco and is used to abduct James Bond. (The Corniche, Silver Shadow saloon, and Silver Wraith II saloon were based on the same platform.) | |
Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow I LWB - Featured in Moonraker and For Your Eyes Only. When Bond arrives in Rio de Janeiro, he is seen as a passenger in a blue Silver Wraith II which takes him to his hotel. In For Your Eyes Only, a Silver Wraith II is owned by Aris Kristatos and takes Bond and the Countess Lisl home from the casino. | |
1962 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud II - Featured in A View to a Kill and driven by Bond's companion Sir Godfrey Tibbett. Along with its driver, it meets an untimely demise when pushed into a lake by May Day. | |
Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow II - Featured in Licence to Kill where Bond is chauffeured around Isthmus City. Also featured in The World Is Not Enough as Valentin Zukovsky's personal vehicle (it ends up in the Caspian Sea after the catwalk was severed). |
Jaguar[]
File:Vehicle - Jaguar E-Type.png | Jaguar E-Type - the E-Type is featured in Thunderball (film), the 1967 Casino Royale parody and Jeffery Deaver's 2011 James Bond continuation novel, Carte Blanche. |
File:Vehicle - Jaguar XK8.png | Jaguar XK8 - James Bond's vehicle of choice in many of the Raymond Benson novels. |
Jaguar XKR - A convertible driven by Zao in Die Another Day, the car was extremely similar in almost every way to a James Bond automobile. The vehicle includes a gatling gun, thermal imaging capabilities, mortar bombs, rockets under the front grille, miniature missiles hidden in the door, and front ramming spikes. | |
File:Vehicle - Jaguar XJR.png | Jaguar XJR - Featured in 2006 Casino Royale. Owned by Le Chiffre, who uses it to kidnap Vesper Lynd in front of Hotel Splendide. |
File:Vehicle - Jaguar XJ8.png | Jaguar XJ8 - Featured in 2006 Casino Royale. Mr. White uses this Jaguar when arriving at his lakeside estate in Italy. |
Jaguar C-X75 - Featured in Spectre. It is used by Mr. Hinx to chase down Bond escaping in the DB10. | |
File:Vehicle - Jaguar XJ.png | Jaguar XJ - Featured in Spectre. Bond and M use it to travel through London at night, only to be lured into a trap set up by Ernst Stavro Blofeld. |
File:Vehicle - Jaguar XK 120.png | Jaguar XK 120 - Featured in the 2018 James Bond novel Forever and a Day as James Bond's personal car. |
Land Rover[]
Land Rover Range Rover Convertible - Featured in Octopussy (film). Appears in the pre-title sequence, where it was driven by James Bond and his colleague Bianca. It is used to tow a horsebox, which secretly contains the AcroStar/Bede BD-5J inside. | |
File:Vehicle - Land Rover Range Rover Series I.png | Land Rover Range Rover Series I - Featured in A View to a Kill (film) and The Living Daylights (film). |
1971 Land Rover 88'' Series III - Featured in The Living Daylights. To make his getaway from Gibraltar, Imposter 00 steals a vehicle loaded with munitions. Appears in the pre-title sequence. | |
File:Vehicle - Land Rover Defender 90 Custom.png | Land Rover Defender 90 Custom - Featured in The World Is Not Enough (film). |
File:Vehicle - Land Rover Range Rover 4.4 V8 Vogue.png | Land Rover Range Rover 4.4 V8 Vogue - Featured in Die Another Day (film). Gustav Graves owns several Range Rovers, which are seen at different parts of the film. |
General Motors (Chevrolet, Cadillac, LaSalle, GMC)[]
1957 Chevrolet Bel Air Convertible - Featured in Dr. No. When 007 arrives in Jamaica, this was the first car Bond was a passenger in; however, the car was stolen, as depicted later in the film. It is driven by a chauffeur known only as "Mr Jones" who is in fact an agent of Dr. No. | |
File:Vehicle - LaSalle Funeral Coach.png | LaSalle Funeral Coach - Featured in Dr. No. Operated by the The Three Blind Mice. |
1961 Chevrolet Apache C30 One-Ton Truck - Featured in From Russia With Love (film). It's a pick-up truck guarded by Rhoda, that was meant to be Red Grant's getaway vehicle. It is instead hijacked by Bond and Romanova. | |
1971 Cadillac Fleetwood - Featured in Live and Let Die. When Bond spots the white Superfly-esque pimpmobile (a Les Dunham Corvorado - a Chevrolet Corvette with Cadillac Eldorado body panels), Mr. Big, Solitaire, and Tee Hee leave their secret facility where a voodoo shop is actually one of Dr. Kananga's hideouts. The Cadillac is later seen outside a Fillet of Soul restaurant alongside a Dunham-converted Cadillac Eldorado coupe. | |
1963 Chevrolet Impala convertible - Featured in Live and Let Die. Bond arrives on Dr. Kananga's island with Rosie Carver locating the spot where Bains was killed. | |
1977 Cadillac Fleetwood limousine - Featured in A View to a Kill. Zorin's thugs flee Stacy's mansion in a Cadillac limousine - Bond fires several rounds even the rounds are useless (the shotgun shells were filled with rocksalt). | |
Chevrolet Corvette C4 - Featured in A View to a Kill, presumably a rental vehicle and driven by Pola Ivanova when she and Bond make their escape from Zorin's pumping station. | |
1978 GMC Vandura - Featured in The Living Daylights. Used by Koskov and Necros to smuggle diamonds (and Bond) out of Tangier. |
Mercedes-Benz[]
Mercedes-Benz 300 S (W188) - Featured in Moonraker (novel). Sir Hugo Drax's personal car, appears during the chase sequence where Drax and his men are chased by James Bond in his Bentley 4½ Litre | |
Mercedes-Benz 190 (W121) - Featured in Goldfinger. Two 190/W121 cars are used to chase down Bond's DB5 at Goldfinger's Factory in Switzerland. | |
Mercedes-Benz 220 SE (W128) - Featured in Goldfinger. Oddjob is a passenger in a grey 220 SE during the car chase at Goldfinger's Factory in Switzerland. | |
Mercedes-Benz O 309 - Featured in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. Used by Ernst Stavro Blofeld to collect the "Angels of Death" at the cable car station, after having left Piz Gloria for their home countries on Christmas Eve. | |
File:Vehicle - Mercedes-Benz 600 (W100).png | Mercedes-Benz 600 (W100) - Featured in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. It is used in the drive-by-shooting that claims Tracy's life at the end of the film, with Blofeld driving it and Irma Bunt shooting the rifle from the backseat. |
File:Vehicle - Mercedes-Benz 280 SE | Mercedes-Benz 280 SE - Featured in For Your Eyes Only. Locque's personal car, which he uses to drive to Hector Gonzales' villa and later attempts to escape the Albanian warehouse with, only to die inside it when Bond kicks it off the cliff. |
File:Vehicle - Mercedes-Benz 200 D.png | Mercedes-Benz 200 D - Featured in For Your Eyes Only. Locque, Erich Kriegler, Claus and other henchmen use a dark red Mercedes-Benz 200 D facelift model when hunting James Bond in Cortina d'Ampezzo. |
Mercedes-Benz 280 S (W108) - Featured in Octopussy. Bond commandeers this Soviet Army staff car to pursue Octopussy's train. When the tires are shredded by a spikestrip, Bond turns onto the railway line and drives the car along the rails until he escapes just before the car is knocked into the river by an oncoming train. | |
File:Vehicle - Mercedes-Benz 500 SEL.png | Mercedes-Benz 500 SEL (W126) - Featured in A View to a Kill. Max Zorin's personal car in the United States. |
Mercedes-Benz Unimog-S 404 AFV - Featured in The Living Daylights and Die Another Day. | |
File:Vehicle - Mercedes-Benz 230 E (W124).png | Mercedes-Benz 230 E (W124) - Featured in GoldenEye. It is the car Xenia drives James Bond to the St. Petersburg Statue Graveyard with, to meet with "Janus". |
Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse (W126) - Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies. It is used by Elliot Carver's henchmen during the parking garage action sequence. |
Porsche[]
File:Vehicle - Porsche 928 S.png | Porsche 928 S - Featured in A View to a Kill (film). |
File:Vehicle - Porsche Boxster.png | Porsche Boxster - Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies (film). |
File:Vehicle - Porsche 911 993 Graves.png | Porsche 911 Carrera 4 - Featured in Die Another Day (film). Part of Colonel Moon's car collection. Destroyed during the pre-titles sequence |
File:Vehicle - Porsche Cayenne Turbo.png | Porsche Cayenne Turbo - Featured in Everything or Nothing. Featured prominently in the game as one of James Bond's provided vehicles. |
File:Vehicle - Porsche 959.png | Porsche 959 - Featured in Spectre (film). |
Chrysler Automotive (Dodge, Chrysler, Jeep, Ram)[]
Dodge M43 - Featured in Goldfinger (film). Posing as an army ambulance, it is used to bring the laser to Fort Knox to cut through the shutters. | |
File:Vehicle - Dodge Polara.png | Dodge Polara - Featured in You Only Live Twice (film). Used by the Japanese assassins who kill Dikko Henderson. |
File:Vehicle - Dodge M37.png | Dodge M37 - Featured in Octopussy (film) and The Living Daylights (film). |
File:Vehicle - Dodge D-100.png | Dodge D-100 - Featured in A View to a Kill (film). Max Zorin owns a red D-100 in A View to a Kill, where it is used by his mine workers at the Main Strike Mine. |
File:Vehicle - Dodge WC 51.png | Dodge WC 51 - Featured in The Living Daylights. It is used by the Red Army and ends up being used by both General Koskov and Necros. |
File:Vehicle - Dodge Ram.png | Dodge Ram - Featured in Licence to Kill. Several of Franz Sanchez' henchmen use a white Dodge Ram during the final tanker chase, including Braun and Perez. |
American Motors[]
AMC Hornet - Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun. Bond steals this car in Thailand, unknowing that Sheriff J.W. Pepper was in it looking to test drive it. It was used for the famous corkscrew jump, a computer-designed stunt that was captured in one take. | |
AMC Matador Coupé - Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun. Francisco Scaramanga and Nick Nack use this car to kidnap Mary Goodnight and make their escape. The vehicle is converted into a 'car plane'; see Aircraft section below. |
Other passenger cars (w/o recurring car brands)[]
Citroën Traction Avant - Featured in the Casino Royale (novel) (as Le Chiffre's car) and From Russia with Love (film) (used by Bulgarians to tail Bond, later stolen by Red Grant). | |
Studillac - Featured in the Diamonds Are Forever (novel). A custom black Studebaker convertible with a Cadillac engine, plus special transmission, brakes and rear axle, owned by Felix Leiter. 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 Alpine roadster - Featured in Dr. No. Bond drives to Miss Taro's home in the Blue Mountains; he is pursued by Dr. No's thugs driving a LaSalle hearse. In the novel version, Bond drives the car that formerly belonged to Commander Strangways, the murdered agent in Kingston. It is also driven by Quarrel. | |
Toyota 2000GT convertible - Featured in You Only Live Twice. Owned by Aki. Two prototype convertibles were built especially for the film; no others were made. One 2000GT convertible was located in South Africa awaiting restoration into the Cars for the Stars museum. | |
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. | |
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 harbour to meet Quarrel Jr. In The Spy Who Loved Me, the crew of the Liparus supertanker use a Mini Moke in their defence against a break out by the submarine crews. | |
Leyland Sherpa 240 - Featured in The Spy Who Loved Me. Van used by Jaws, who tricks Bond and Anya to sneak in the van, only for Jaws to take them to the pillars where he tries to kill them. | |
Citroën 2CV - Featured in For Your Eyes Only. A tiny but seemingly indestructible (rental) car belonging to Melina Havelock that Bond uses to make a "fast" getaway after Melina assassinates Hector Gonzales, who murdered her parents. The car used in the movie was allegedly fitted with a Citroën GS 4-cylinder boxer engine (in place of the standard 2-cylinder boxer), to make it able to outrun the two Peugeot 504s in pursuit. | |
File:Vehicle - Peugeot 504.png | Peugeot 504 - Featured in For Your Eyes Only (film), used by Gonzales' henchmen to chase down the Citroën 2CV driven by Bond and Melina. The 504 also makes a small appearance in Tomorrow Never Dies (film). |
File:Vehicle - Opel Rekord (E).png | Opel Rekord (E) - Featured in For Your Eyes Only. |
Alfa Romeo GTV6 - Featured in Octopussy. After falling from Octopussy's train and hitching a lift in a Volkswagen Beetle, Bond steals this car to make the last stage of his journey to the US Air Force Base. West German police BMW 5 Series pursue Bond after his theft of the vehicle. Interestingly, sharp eyes will spot that this is a GTV 6 Quadrifoglio, the highest specification Alfa Romeo available, and widely considered the finest of these cars, as well as the fastest. | |
Bajaj RE taxi - 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-wallah 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!" | |
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. | |
Audi 200 Quattro Exclusiv - Featured in The Living Daylights. An Austrian-registered is used as a getaway car after General Koskov's defection at the start of the film. Later, Bond is seen driving an Audi 100 Avant in Tangier, following General Pushkin. | |
File:Vehicle - Maserati Biturbo 425i.png | Maserati Biturbo 425i - Featured in Licence to Kill. Car owned by Franz Sanchez, appearing in the final chase sequence. |
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. | |
ZAZ 965A - Featured in GoldenEye. It's Jack Wade's car in Russia, and uses it to drive Bond around St. Petersburg. | |
File:Vehicle - GAZ-31029.png | GAZ-31029 "Volga" - Featured in GoldenEye. Used by General Ourumov to try take Natalya to the Soviet Missile train, while chased by Bond in the T-55 Tank. |
File:Vehicle - VAZ-2106.png | VAZ-2106 "Zhiguli" - Featured in GoldenEye. Used by St. Petersburg police during the tank sequence. |
File:Vehicle -Lamborghini Diablo.png | Lamborghini Diablo - Featured in Die Another Day (film). Part of Colonel Moon/Gustav Graves' car collection. Ends up stuck upside down in North Korea, after its dropped from Graves' Antonov. |
File:Vehicle - Alfa Romeo 159.png | Alfa Romeo 159 - Featured in Quantum of Solace (film). Two black 159 cars are used by Quantum henchmen to chase and eliminate Bond in his Aston Martin DBS V12, having Mr. White abducted in the trunk. |
Koenigsegg CCXR - Featured in Blood Stone. Nicole Hunter's personal car. | |
File:Vehicle - Audi A5.png | Audi A5 - Featured in Skyfall. Used by Patrice as a getaway vehicle in Istanbul. |
Military transport vehicles (not part of recurring car brands)[]
Willys Jeep (MB, MC, and MD variants) - Featured in Goldfinger (film) and Licence to Kill (film). | |
File:Vehicle - M59 Armored Personnel Carrier.png | M59 Armored Personnel Carrier - Featured in Goldfinger (film). Can be spotted at the vicinity of Fort Knox. |
UAZ 469 - makes multiple appearances, featuring in The Living Daylights (Czechoslovakian blockade/frozen lake sequence), GoldenEye (after Tiger explodes and then the tank chase), Tomorrow Never Dies, The World Is Not Enough, Die Another Day and Casino Royale. | |
File:Vehicle - AM General M923.png | AM General M923 - Featured in Licence to Kill (film). It is used by Florida SWAT. |
Tanks/Armored Fighting Vehicles[]
Dragon tank - Featured in both novel and film adaptations of Dr. No. A modified swamp buggy with dragon camouflage and armor plating. The dragon tank was employed by Dr. Julius No to keep inquisitive locals away from his operations on Crab Key. It is equipped with a forward-firing flame thrower. | |
File:Vehicle - M48A3 Patton.png | M48A3 Patton - Featured in Goldfinger (film). Can be spotted at the vicinity of Fort Knox. |
M8 Greyhound - featured in The Living Daylights. Used by the ČSLA to try prevent James Bond and Kara Milovy from escaping in their Aston Martin V8 Vantage Volante. | |
Panhard AML - Featured in The Living Daylights. Two pursue Mujahadeen fighters across the bridge. | |
M5 Stuart Tank - Featured in Licence to Kill (film). Utilized by the Isthmian militia under command of Colonel Heller to raid the safe house belonging to Hong Kong Narcotics Agency, where Bond is currently imprisoned at. | |
T-55 battle tank - Featured in GoldenEye. A Russian tank taken by Bond to pursue General Ourumov in St. Petersburg. | |
Platinum Tank - Featured in Everything or Nothing. Used by Nikolai Diavolo and his men to take over Moscow and the Kremlin. They are made of platinum to prevent them from being destroyed by the metal-eating nanobots that have been released to destroy Russian military vehicles. James Bond (under control of the player) gains control of one as well. |
Other land vehicles[]
BSA Lightning A65L - Featured in Thunderball. A modified BSA Lightning motorcycle employed by SPECTRE agent, Fiona Volpe. It is equipped with forward-firing rockets. | |
Moon buggy - Featured in Diamonds Are Forever. Used by Bond to escape from the laboratory. Fast but infamously fragile, one of its wheels can be seen rolling past the camera position as Bond drives by it during the escape. | |
Honda ATV - Featured in Diamonds are Forever. Bond commandeers an all-terrain vehicle after he ditches the moon buggy. | |
1947 AEC Regent III RT246 - Featured in Live and Let Die. A double-decker bus which was used by Bond and Solitaire in their escape from Kananga. En route it becomes a single-decker bus thanks to an inconveniently placed low bridge. | |
San Francisco Fire Department Fire Truck - Featured in A View to a Kill. Ladder truck commandeered by Bond and Stacey. | |
Kenworth W-900 - Featured in Licence to Kill (film). Sanchez has four of these trucks leave his plant after Bond destroys the place. Bond eventually hijacks one. | |
Cagiva W16 600 - Featured in GoldenEye. Motorcycle used by Arkangel Chemical Weapons Facility troops. Bond ends up taking one to catch the unpiloted plane. | |
Soviet Missile Train - Featured in GoldenEye. Operated by the Janus Syndicate. | |
Hovercraft - Featured in Die Another Day. Appears in the pre-titles sequence as part of Colonel Moon weaponry. Colonel Moon eventually leaves in a convoy of Hovercrafts and is later then pursued by Bond in one. | |
File:Vehicle - 1948 Maserati 4CLT.png | 1948 Maserati 4CLT - Featured in Trigger Mortis (originally meant to appear in the unpublished short-story Murder On Wheels). Grand Prix race car that Bond drives in the Nürburgring to thwart the SMERSH agents. |
File:Vehicle - 650 CC Triumph Thunderbird Motorbike.png | 650 CC Triumph Thunderbird Motorbike - Featured in Trigger Mortis. |
Aircraft[]
Medium/Small Airliners[]
Piper PA-28 Cherokee - Featured in Goldfinger. Used by the members of Pussy Galore's Flying Circus. They are used to (falsely) spread the Delta 9 Nerve Gas upon Fort Knox and the surrounding area. | |
Lockheed JetStar - Featured in Goldfinger. Used as Auric Goldfinger's private jet. It is later disguised as a United States Air Force C-140 transport to kidnap Bond while Goldfinger makes his escape. | |
Aero Commander 200 - Featured in You Only Live Twice (film). Used by Helga Brandt, it is later used by her to trap Bond and crash the plane to kill him. | |
Republic RC-3 Seabee - Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun (film). Used by Bond to reach Scaramanga's Island. | |
Handley Page Jetstream - In the pre-titles sequence of Moonraker, Bond is almost left stranded on this aircraft with no pilot and no instruments, until he is pushed out with no parachute by Jaws. | |
Cessna A185F - Featured in For Your Eyes Only. Flown by Cuban hitman, Hector Gonzales. After flying Melina Havelock to Corfu he gunned down her parents with a machine gun mounted on the underside the plane.| | |
Beechcraft C-45H Expeditor - Featured in Octopussy. It is Kamal Khan's private aircraft. Bond grips onto the aircraft during take off and, after a fight with Gobinda atop the Twin Beech, rescues Octopussy before it crashes. | |
Piper PA-18-150 Super Cub - Featured in Licence to Kill. A crop dusting plane flown by Pam Bouvier in pursuit of Franz Sanchez's cocaine-filled Tankers. It is crippled by a stinger surface-to-air missile during the chase sequence. | |
Cessna 172P Skyhawk - Featured in Licence to Kill and GoldenEye | |
Pilatus PC-6 (B2-H2 Turbo Porter) - Featured in GoldenEye. Used by Bond to escape the Arkangel Chemical Weapons Facility. | |
Douglas DC-3-313 - Featured in Quantum of Solace. An old passenger aircraft Bond exchanges for a 2008 Land-Rover Range Rover Sport. It was used to investigate Quantum's activity in the Bolivian desert and was shot down during a skirmish with an Aermacchi SF 260 plane. | |
Britten-Norman BN-2 Islander - Featured in Spectre (film). Used by Bond to chase down Mr. Hinx's convoy that has Madeleine Swann captive. |
Large Airliners[]
File:Vehicle -Armstrong Whitworth AW660 Argosy.png | Armstrong Whitworth AW.660 Argosy - Featured in Octopussy (film). Appears at Colonel Toro's base during pre-title sequence. |
Lockheed Hercules - Two examples are used in The Living Daylights. The first, seen in the pre-titles sequence, is a Royal Air Force example and is M's flying office. It is the staging post for the 00-section penetration of the Gibraltar radar installation. The second example is a Soviet Air Force transport, used extensively during Bond's escape from Afghanistan. It should be noted, of course, that the Soviet Air Force did not operate any western aircraft types in reality, including the Hercules. | |
Antonov An-124 - Featured in Die Another Day, this aircraft is used to transport Gustav Graves' equipment out of Iceland. It is later used as Graves' airborne command centre during the Icarus attack on the Korean DMZ. | |
Boeing 747-236B "Skyfleet S570" - Featured in Casino Royale. A 'prototype' airliner which Le Chiffre conspired to destroy. Transformed using physical props and CGI, it is actually a modified ex-British Airways Boeing 747-200 G-BDXJ. |
Fighters[]
File:Vehicle - F-11E Aardvark.png | General Dynamics F-111E Aardvark - Featured in Octopussy (film). |
Harrier Jump Jet - Featured in The Living Daylights (film) (trainer variant), novel Win, Lose or Die (BAE Sea Harrier) and videogame Agent Under Fire (trainer variant) | |
Mikoyan MiG-29 - Featured in GoldenEye. Three respond to the emergency alarm triggered at the Severnaya facility. All are destroyed by the electromagnetic pulse generated by the GoldenEye satellite weapon. | |
Aero L-39 Albatros - Two are featured in the pre-titles sequence of Tomorrow Never Dies. Bond commandeers one in an attempt to evacuate a nuclear torpedo before a missile strike, the other pursues in an attempt to stop him. | |
File:Vehicle -ChinaMiG.png | Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-23 - Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies. Appear as the "Chinese MiGs" (even though MiG-23 was never adopted by the Chinese) when Carver's sealth ship sinks the Devonshire at the start of the film. |
File:Vehicle - Phoenix Ultralight.png | Phoenix Ultralight - Featured in Nightfire. Fictional fighter jet operated (and presumably manufactured) by Rafael Drake's Phoenix International company. |
Yakovlev Yak-38 - Featured in Everything or Nothing. Appears during the battle at the Kremlin Bunker's freight elevator shaft, piloted by Nikolai Diavolo and Dr. Katya Nadanova | |
SIAI-Marchetti SF.260 - Featured in Quantum of Solace. While investigating over the Bolivian desert, Bond's DC-3 fell under attack from an Aermacchi SF 260, presumably sent by the Quantum organisation. |
Helicopters[]
Hiller UH-12 - Featured in From Russia with Love (film), Goldfinger (film) and From Russia with Love (video game). | |
File:Vehicle - Bell 47J Ranger.png | Bell 47J Ranger - featured in Thunderball (film) |
Kawasaki KV-107 - A vehicle pursuing Bond and Aki in You Only Live Twice is dispatched by the use of this Japanese variant of the Boeing-Vertol Sea Knight and a large magnet suspended from the helicopter. | |
File:Vehicle - Kawasaki-Bell 47G-3.png | Kawasaki-Bell 47G-3 - Featured in You Only Live Twice (film). Operated by SPECTRE, these helicopters attack Bond flying the Little Nellie to scout where the Ning-Po ship had unloaded its cargo. |
File:Vehicle - Alouette II.png | Alouette II - Featured in You Only Live Twice (film) and Octopussy (film). |
Bell 206 JetRanger - The Bell 206 is a frequently appearing helicopter in the 007 Franchise, beginning with the 1969 James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service. The aircraft subsequently appeared in Diamonds Are Forever (1971), Live and Let Die (1973), The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), Moonraker (1979) and For Your Eyes Only (1981). | |
MD 500 Helicopters - Featured in Diamonds Are Forever, Die Another Day (film), Casino Royale (2006 film) and Spectre (film). | |
File:Vehicle - Bell UH-1 Iroquois.png | Bell UH-1 Iroquois - Featured in Diamonds Are Forever and GoldenEye. |
Eurocopter AS365 Dauphin - this family of helicopters appear in Octopussy (film) (Aérospatiale-era SA 365 Dauphin 2), Licence to Kill (film) (HH-65A Dolphin), Tomorrow Never Dies (film) (AS565 Panther), The World Is Not Enough (film) (AS365) and Spectre (film) (AS365N2 Dauphin 2) | |
File:Vehicle - MBB Bo 105.png | MBB Bo 105 - Featured in A View to a Kill (film) and Spectre (film) |
Eurocopter AS355 - Appears in multiple Bond films, including A View to a Kill (film), Licence to Kill (film), GoldenEye (film), Tomorrow Never Dies (film) and The World Is Not Enough (film). It's most significant appearance is in The World Is Not Enough, where they appear as the saw-blade carrying deforestation helicopters. | |
Mil Mi-24 - Featured in Permission to Die, Nightfire and Blood Stone. | |
Eurocopter Tiger - Featured in GoldenEye. Xenia Onatopp and General Ourumov steal an EMP-resistant Tiger helicopter in order to obtain the controls for the GoldenEye weapons system. | |
Robinson R22 Beta - Featured in GoldenEye. Small helicopter used by Trevelyan and Xenia to escape the Soviet Missile Train. | |
Mil Mi-8 - Featured in COLD and Die Another Day. | |
AgustaWestland AW101 - Featured in Skyfall. A helicopter used by Silva and his men during the assault on Skyfall Lodge. It was subsequently destroyed by a gas cylinder explosion from within the house. |
Other[]
Bell-Textron Jet Pack - Featured in Thunderball. A rocket pack based on the Bell rocket belt. | |
Avro Vulcan - SPECTRE hijack a Vulcan in Thunderball, crashlanding it in the ocean to steal its nuclear payload. | |
Little Nellie (Wallis WA-116 Series 1) - Featured in You Only Live Twice. A heavily armed gyrocopter that could be transported in several cases and quickly assembled in the field. | |
File:Vehicle - Golden Ghost dirigible.png | Golden Ghost - Featured in The Golden Ghost comic strip series. It is a nuclear-powered, jet airship designed by British manufacturer, Usher Aircraft. On its maiden voyage, it was hijacked by ex-SPECTRE associate and project promoter, Felix Bruhl. |
Car Plane - Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun. Based on a 1974 AMC Matador coupe, owned by Scaramanga. During a car chase with Bond, Scaramanga drives the Matador into a disused barn, which was housing the plane section (two wings and a jet engine). Scaramanga clamps the plane section onto the top of the Matador and uses it to fly away from Bond. | |
Acrostar Jet / Bede BD-5J - Featured in Octopussy. The Acrostar was used to escape from a mission in the opening sequence. The wings and nosecone section of this plane fold up vertically while not in use allowing it to be stored in small compartments (in this case a horse trailer). | |
Hot Air Balloon - Featured in Octopussy. A Union-Jack emblazoned Hot Air Balloon, used by Q and Bond to storm Kamal Khan's palace. It is equipped with CCTV cameras. | |
Navy XT-7B - Featured in Never Say Never Again. Jet powered flying platform used by James Bond and Felix Leiter to infiltrate Maximillian Largo's hideout in Palmyra | |
File:Vehicle -Skyship 6000.png | Skyship 6000 - Featured in A View to a Kill. Max Zorin's first a larger airship. It is used for conferencing facilities, where Zorin first proposes the Main Strike plan. |
Skyship 500 - Featured in A View to a Kill. Max Zorin's second, a much smaller blimp. It was intended to be used for Zorin to watch the destruction of Silicon Valley, but with that plan thwarted was a getaway vehicle that meets its end on the Golden Gate Bridge. | |
Parahawk - Several are featured in The World Is Not Enough. They are hybrid paragliders/snowmobiles and are capable of flight or driving across arctic terrain. Several are sent to kill Bond as part of a scheme devised by Electra King and Renard. | |
Switchblades - Featured in Die Another Day, the Switchblade is essentially a one-man glider shaped like a fighter jet. It features retractable wings that control the speed and trajectory of the craft. Fitted with the same material on a stealth bomber, the switchblade allows Bond and Jinx to enter North Korea undetected. The switchblade is based on a workable model called "PHASST" (Programmable High Altitude Single Soldier Transport). | |
K-Class Ekranoplan - Featured in Blood Stone. It is an ground effect vehicle owned and operated by Stefan Pomerov. |
Spacecraft[]
Bird 1 - Featured in You Only Live Twice . Built by SPECTRE, the Bird One spacecraft was designed to kidnap American and Soviet orbital vehicles, engulfing the target craft and returning it to SPECTRE's hidden launch site in Japan. | |
Moonraker Shuttle - Featured in Moonraker. "Moonraker" is a brand name applied to a space shuttle orbiter design, built by Drax Industries for NASA. Though the actual Space Shuttle had not flown by the time Moonraker was released, the Drax Moonraker is identical in design. These were named Moonraker 1-6. |
Marine vehicles[]
Q-branch marine vehicles[]
Wet Nellie (Lotus Esprit S1) – Featured in The Spy Who Loved Me. A modified Lotus Esprit S2 that could transform into a submarine. | |
Wetbike – Featured in The Spy Who Loved Me. A hydrofoil "water motorcycle", built by a unit of Minnesota-based Arctic Enterprises. Used by Bond to travel from the US Submarine to Stromberg's Atlantis to save Triple X. | |
Q's Hydrofoil Boat (Glastron Carlson CV23HT) – Featured in Moonraker; based on a Glastron design. Bond uses this boat to escape from Jaws while searching for the spacecraft launching facility. Comes with all the usual Q refinements such as tracking torpedoes and a hang-glider when an immediate ditching of the boat was required. | |
Gondola Hovercraft – Featured in Moonraker. While attacked on the canals of Venice, Bond escapes his assailants by using his gondola's hidden self-propulsion system which also included a hovercraft function to leave the water. | |
Crocodile Submersible – Featured in Octopussy. Bond travels to Octopussy's island inside a boat designed to look like an alligator. | |
Iceberg Submarine – Featured in A View to a Kill (film). Bond escapes from a mission in Siberia by getting into a boat/submarine built to look like an iceberg. | |
Q-Boat – Featured in The World Is Not Enough (film). Was created by Q as a "fishing boat" for his retirement. Came with missiles and a GPS tracking system. It could also submerge although the pilot either needed to have his own breathing apparatus or surface quickly before he drowned. However, this feature wasn't exactly finished when Bond took it which could account for why the pilot was exposed to the water using that function. |
Yachts[]
File:Vehicle - Wavekrest.png | Wavekrest – featured in The Hildebrand Rarity (short story); it is an luxury ship owned by the literary incarnation of Milton Krest. In the movie Licence to Kill, it is re-imagined as an marine research vessel, that's operated by the movie incarnation of Milton Krest. |
Blofeld's Yacht (Delos/Aurora) – featured in From Russia with Love (film). It is a base for SPECTRE, where Ernst Stavro Blofeld held meetings about SPECTRE's plans. | |
File:Vehicle - XX's Yacht.png | XX's Yacht – Featured in The League of Vampires comic strip serial. Owned by Xerxes Xerophanos. |
Santa Mavra (Panther) – Featured in For Your Eyes Only (film). She belongs to Aris Kristatos, who uses it to drag James Bond and Melina Havelock through the ocean, in order to get them eaten by sharks. | |
Disco Volante – A fictional ship in the James Bond novel Thunderball (1961) and its 1965 film adaptation of the same name. It was a luxurious hydrofoil craft owned by Emilio Largo, an agent of SPECTRE. | |
Flying Saucer (Nabila/Kingdom 5KR) - featured in Never Say Never Again. Luxury Superyacht owned by SPECTRE operative Maximillian Largo. As the film is a remake of Thunderball, this yacht is essentially a re-imagining of the Disco Volante featured in Thunderball. | |
Spectral Marine 2:20 – Featured in The Living Daylights (film). Docked at Morocco, it is operated by the CIA as an intelligence-gathering vessel and mobile base of operations. | |
Manticore (Northern Cross) - featured in GoldenEye (film). Yacht owned by the Janus Syndicate that's docked at Monaco. Bond boards it to try find Xenia, only to find the body of Admiral Chuck Farrell, who has been murdered by her. | |
Sunseeker Predator 108 - featured in Casino Royale (film). Yacht owned by Le Chiffre, moored near Nassau, Bahamas. |
Submarines[]
File:Vehicle - HMS Ranger.png | HMS Ranger aka "Stromberg 2" – Featured in The Spy Who Loved Me (film). Resolution-class submarine under the command of Commander Talbot, it was later hijacked by Karl Stromberg to be used in his scheme. |
File:Vehicle - Type VIIC U-Boat.png | Type VIIC U-Boat – Featured in SeaFire. Part of Sir Maxwell Tarn's plan to engineer a oil spill at coast of Puerto Rico by exploding the Golden Bough oil tanker and then having the Mare Nostrum to clean it up. |
File:Vehicle - Victor-III Class Submarine.png | Victor-III Class Submarine – Featured in the movie and the video game adaptations of The World is Not Enough. Integral part of the villains plan, it is operated by Captain Nikolai (nephew of Zukovsky) before the villains have him and his crew killed. Renard intends to use it for a kamikaze attack, by causing its reactor to explode and sabotage the pipelines of Elektra's oil rivals, giving her a monopoly of the region. |
Warships[]
HMS Tenby – featured in You Only Live Twice (film). | |
La Fayette (F710) – featured in GoldenEye (film). French Navy Frigate docked at Monaco, it is used to demonstrate the Tiger Helicopter, which is then stolen by the Janus Syndicate. | |
HMS Chester – featured in Tomorrow Never Dies (film). Commanded by an unnamed captain, she was responsible for launching a Anglo-Russian cruise missile strike on an arms bazaar along the Russian border. | |
HMS Devonshire – featured in Tomorrow Never Dies (film). British frigate that's scuttled by Carver's Stealth Ship at the start of the film. Used secure missiles to be used by the Stealth Ship to shoot at China to aid General Chang's coup. Bond and Wai Lin dive to investigate the wreckage of the ship. | |
File:Vehicle - HMS Bedford.png | HMS Bedford – featured in Tomorrow Never Dies (film). British frigate that is present at Carver's attempt to shoot the missile to China. The HMS Bedford plays key part in destroying the stealth ship. |
File:Vehicle - HNoMS Vargr.png | HNoMS Vargr – featured in Vargr graphic novel series. Decommissioned battleship previously operated by the Royal Norwegian Navy. She was sold and subsequently used as a biological weapon laboratory by Serbian scientist, Slaven Kurjak. |
Motorboats[]
Fairey Huntress 23 – featured in From Russia with Love (film). Boats used during the last action sequence near Trieste. Bond and Tania steal one with bunch of barrels attached on the rear, with SPECTRE henchmen soon arriving with Huntress 23 boats with black decals. | |
Fairey Huntsman 28 – featured in From Russia with Love (film). Commandeered by Morzeny to chase down Bond and Tania escaping in the Huntress 23 boat. | |
File:Vehicle - Glastron GT 150 Speedboat.png | Glastron GT 150 Speedboat – featured in Live and Let Die (film). First boat acquired by Bond during the Louisiana boat chase. |
Glastron CVX-18 Intimidator – Featured in A View to a Kill (film). Used by Max Zorin, when collecting May Day after her parachute jump onto a wedding boat on the river Seine in Paris. | |
Riva Aquarama Special – Featured in GoldenEye (film). Used by Xenia and the imposter Chuck Farrell to leave to the La Fayette frigate, before Bond infiltrates the Manticore yacht. | |
Riva Monte Carlo 30 Offshorer – Featured in GoldenEye (film). Used by Bond to get aboard Manticore and then leave it to try catch Xenia at the La Fayette frigate. |
Other marine vehicles[]
Ning-Po – Featured in You Only Live Twice (film). Japanese cargo vessel operated by Osato Chemicals and Engineering on behalf of SPECTRE. | |
Bathosub – Featured in Diamonds Are Forever (film). Midget submarine employed by Blofeld to try escape the Baja oil rig. | |
File:Vehicle - Bangkok Boat.png | Bangkok Boat – Featured in The Man with the Golden Gun (film). Used by Bond to escape Chula and the other henchmen from the Fighting School. |
Liparus – Karl Stromberg's million ton, submarine swallowing, tanker from The Spy Who Loved Me. | |
File:Vehicle - Mare Nostrum.png | Mare Nostrum – Featured in SeaFire. It is an experimental OSRV (Oil spill response vessel, manufactured by Tarn International for Sir Maxwell Tarn's scheme. |
File:Vehicle - Golden Bough.png | Golden Bough – Featured in SeaFire. Supertanker owned and operated by MetroTex oil company. It is Maxwell Tarn's target, which he intends to explode with his U-Boat. |
Stealth Ship – Featured in Tomorrow Never Dies. The Stealth Ship is an almost undetectable ship owned by media mogul Elliot Carver. | |
File:Vehicle - Mirabelle.png | Mirabelle – Featured in Forever and a Day. Cruise liner commissioned by Irwin Wolfe, used to smuggle heroin from the South of France to America. |
See also[]
James Bond films |
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Sean Connery Dr. No (1962) • From Russia with Love (1963) • Goldfinger (1964) • Thunderball (1965) • You Only Live Twice (1967) • Diamonds Are Forever (1971) |
George Lazenby On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969) |
Roger Moore Live and Let Die (1973) • The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) • The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) • Moonraker (1979) • For Your Eyes Only (1981) • Octopussy (1983) • A View to a Kill (1985) |
Timothy Dalton The Living Daylights (1987) • Licence to Kill (1989) |
Pierce Brosnan GoldenEye (1995) • Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) • The World Is Not Enough (1999) • Die Another Day (2002) |
Daniel Craig Casino Royale (2006) • Quantum of Solace (2008) • Skyfall (2012) • Spectre (2015) • No Time To Die (2021) |
Unofficial films Casino Royale (1954) • Casino Royale (1967) • Never Say Never Again (1983) |
All Bond films on Archive |