Posts Tagged ‘aston martin’

Rolls Royce & Bentley, 1955...

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

We stumbled across these very lovely images from the Rolls/​Bentley brochure recently and were taken aback by the range of truly beautiful cars that were being produced in England at the time.

These wonderful cars were of course heading up the high-​​end. But there was at each echelon of British motoring a choice selection of vehicles with real panache.

From Aston’s DB 3 right down to the MGA — taking in Bristol’s sports cars and of course Jaguar’s XK series on the way — the English motorist, as long as he had a bit of cash at his disposal, was spoilt for choice.

For us we would have gone for the Bentley Continental Park Ward coupé convertible (above) — preferably in patriotic racing green with, perhaps, a deep chocolate brown hood and leather to match.

Perfect for both inter­con­tin­ental dash to the Riviera as well as negoti­ating the elegant streets of Mayfair and Belgravia.

Le Mans 2011

Friday, June 10th, 2011


Click images and click top right to go huge!

With the great weekend at la Circuit La Sarthe almost upon us there’s little we’d love to do more than pull up the deep buttoned man– chair up close to the ‘tube, stack a case of fine claret and some fruits of the delicatessen, and gorge on the ultimate endurance event of motorsport.

Problem is, as with most forms of top-​​level racing, designs and sponsorship liveries have tended to meld into one colourful mass  — and it has become more and more tricky to I-​​D your Astons from your Audis, your Porsches from your prancing horses. Especially at night. Especially eighteen hours into your marathon endurance armchair session.

So the kind folk from Nissan have offered these spotter’s guides to make life a little easier — and if you are like us nerdish about things graphic and car-​​shaped, we think you’ll agree that they look pretty beautiful in an aesthetic kind of way, even if you stripped away the use value.

Let’s raise a toast to the most famous single motor race on the planet!

Car Crush #8: Aston Martin DB5 Shooting Brake

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Forefroent of the mind this morning: the needs of a small family, and the need to love your daily drive. Tricky poles to reconcile. But, finding this lovely shot in our twitterbox this morning, it has become clear that nowhere is a gentleman’s twin automotive require­ments of style and utility met better than the Aston Martin DB5 Shooting Brake.

The story of this most desirable of wagons goes that entre­preneur and Aston patron David Brown (whose initials have been ascribed to the perennial DB tag) found the ordinary DB5 too small to carry his dogs and hunting gear around in, so he asked Aston Martin to make him an estate version for his personal use.

Aston went ahead and commis­sioned esteemed English coach builders Harold Radford coach­works to modify a standard DB5 Vantage to Mr brown’s exact specifications.

The rest of Aston Martin’s weathly constituency of aficionados heard about the ‘one off’ — and eventually as many as a dozen shooting brakes were produced for various fortunate individuals with impec­cable good taste.

Perchance to Dream

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

Definitive Cars of the 1980s

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Escort XR3i
Image: Chris Taylor

Near ubiquitous in the suburban environs of Britain in the mid eighties, Ford’s everyman classic is possibly Britain’s most instantly recog­nisable eighties motor.

Porsche 911 (959)

Spookily locked in tight to the aesthetic of the age, the 959 was Porsche’s group B rally homolog­ation special, and pioneered the company’s all wheel drive system.

Ferrari F40

The F40 was last car that the great Enzo Ferrari would personally commission, built to commem­orate the first four decades of the Prancing Horse. This ultimate in race bred road-​​legal motoring, it brought track and road exper­ience together in a legendarily lean, turbocharged package.

Honda CR-​​X

Nippy, light and to this day an accessible cult of enthu­si­astic motoring, we still desire one of these eminently chuckable Civic variants.

E30 M3 EVO.

Lusted after these last quarter of a century for its boxy mechan­icity, the E30 3 series makes you wish the world was the Green Hell.

Aston Martin V8 Vantage Zagato

Imagined in steel, wood and leather in the fusty workshops of Newport Pagnall, but bodied by the single minded Zagato in Milano. This was an unholy fusion of the old-​​world Aston and Italianate angularity. Decadent, faintly ridiculous, like the decade itself.

Audi Sport Quattro

No, Gene Hunt didn’t drive one of these. This was the short, stubby Group B Homologation car, one that no copper could ever afford. The Quattro expressed the twin obses­sions of the era  – all wheel drive and forced induction – in a geomet­rically appro­priate form that perfectly fitted the temper of the times.

Peugeot 205GTi

The defin­itive hot hatch of the eighties, the 205 GTi had front wheel drive but oversteered pleas­urably with lift-​​off going into the corner. This car is, to this day, stripped down, simple fun. Its success is as responsible as any car for the near ubiquity of the Front Wheel Drive form in current everyman motors.

Alfasud Ti Cloverleaf

We think some editions of Alfa’s ‘Sud are plain ugly: but the cloverleaf later versions with the twin carb 1500 Boxer and the bits of plastic trim scream eighties cool, and having recently driven one (thanks Scott) we are convinced. Some say they are even more fun to drive than the 205.

Ben Oliver's Screen Burn

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

The most famous movie car is James Bond’s Aston, but in Ian Fleming’s novels he drives three Bentleys, starting with a ’33 4.5-litre Blower and moving onto a MkIV and a MkII Continental. None features anything more impressive than a pistol in the glovebox. The only Aston mentioned in the books is a DB MkIII, which gets reinforced steel bumpers, a homing signal and a concealed drawer for Bond’s Walther PPK; the famous gadgetry only appears in the films. Our hero drove some terrible old crap too; our top three ‘cars Bond should never have driven’ are the 2CV from For Your Eyes Only, the AMC Hornet from The Man with the Golden Gun, and the insipid BMW Z3 which makes a merci­fully brief appearance in Goldeneye.

Bond also drove a film fake. The Z8 which gets sawn in half in The World is Not Enough is actually a replica built over a Cobra kit car chassis. It wasn’t the expense of wrecking the real thing that made BMW build it; it just couldn’t risk the wrath of Bond fans by putting him back in the Z3, but production of the Z8 hadn’t started by the time filming began. Other screen fakes include Ferris Bueller’s dad’s ’61 Ferrari 250 GT California Spider, and Crockett’s black Daytona Spider in Miami Vice, which was actually a 1980 ‘Vette under­neath. Outraged, Ferrari supplied genuine Testarossas for later series, but a ‘stunt’ fake version was also built on an old DeTomaso Pantera chassis using salvaged Testarossa panels.

The most famous kit car was, of course, KITT. The Knight Industries Two Thousand was a black Pontiac Trans-​​Am which first hit our screens in Knight Rider in 1982, when The ‘Hoff’s bubble perm was still the height of fashion and the year 2000 seemed impossibly far off. At the launch of the show, Glen A. Larson’s production team listed the car’s specific­ation in great detail. The talking, sentient KITT boasted incredibly futur­istic features such as the rocket-​​assisted Super Pursuit Mode, a ‘molecular-​​bonded’ armour system that rendered everything, including its tyres, imper­vious to all attacks, and, controlling it all, a then-​​unimaginably huge one-​​gigabyte memory, or as much as an iPod Shuffle.

We’d like to think that the nine minute, forty-​​two second chase scene in Bullitt just ‘happened’, but in fact it took three weeks to film, an age in the low-​​budget late sixties, and if you look carefully the same brief panning shot is used three times. When the rear-​​view mirror is tilted up to show the reflection of the driver, McQueen is really at the wheel; when it’s down his place has been taken by stuntman Bud Ekins. Director Peter Yates was personally requested by McQueen after he saw the chase scene Yates shot in London for Robbery, his film about the Great Train Robbery. But even McQueen couldn’t persuade City Hall to let them shoot on the Golden Gate Bridge, the most obvious setting for a driving scene in San Francisco.

You might think that Herbie couldn’t have been anything other than a Beetle, but the Bug was ‘auditioned’ alongside other ‘quirky’ imports to the US such as Volvos and Toyotas before being given the role. By contrast, the car came first in cult road movie Vanishing Point, starring Barry ‘Petrocelli’ Newman. Chrysler gave five Dodge Challengers to Twentieth Century Fox for the car’s launch in 1970, and director Richard C. Sarafian was asked if he could make a movie with them. Some of the engine sounds were lifted from Bullitt. By the end of filming, four of the cars had been wrecked, and the fifth was stolen from the set by a hooker, but later recovered.

If Herbie the Volvo seems odd, consider this; the DeLorean in Back to the Future was almost a fridge. Writer and director Robert Zemeckis scrapped his first idea because he didn’t want kids copying the movie, climbing into them and going hypothermic. But the gullwing doors on the DeLorean proved almost as dangerous; the scenes where Michael J. Fox repeatedly bangs his head on them weren’t scripted but were inspired by the accident he had when he first tried to get in. And who makes the tyres? ‘Good Year’, of course.

Given that a total of 309 had to be built, it’s unsur­prising that there are some glaring continuity errors on the Dukes of Hazzards’ General Lee, the most obvious being the different numbering used for the ‘01’ on the door. Warner Bros took the construction of the General Lee in-​​house when it discovered that the Valuzet brothers, who had been building and renting them to the studio under contract, had been ‘ringing’ cars deemed unsafe and written off after jumps, and sending them back to be used again. Warner Bros. issued a strict specific­ation that every General Lee had to be built to, including how the underside should look, in an attempt to slow the tide of complaints from anoraks. But it was running out of suitable Chargers to convert, and even resorted to sending light aircraft out to spot them. Only 23 genuine Lees survive.

For attention to detail it’s hard to beat the movie adapt­ation of Stephen King’s novel Christine, about a possessed 1958 Plymouth Fury. By the time the movie was made in ’83 most Furies had rotted away, but the rather than switch to a more convenient car the producers seriously delayed the film’s release by spending two and half years placing ads in newspapers to assemble the 23 cars they needed to make the film. Four survive.

Perhaps unsur­pris­ingly, no original Bluesmobiles survive. Transport for Jake and Elwood in The Blues Brothers, a dozen ’74 Dodge Monacos  — “cop tires, cop suspension and cop motor — a 440 cubic-​​inch plant” — were prepared for the production, including one built solely to fall apart in Chicago’s Daley Plaza at the end of the film. Watch the speedo in the chase scene under Chicago’s elevated railway lines; director John Landis insists that the 120mph it shows is genuine.

Like the Bond movies, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was an Albert ‘Cubby’ Broccoli production of an Ian Fleming novel. The movie might have been ruined by the execrable Dick van Dyke, but the story has a far more credible inspir­ation. There were two real Chitties, both aero-​​engined Brooklands racers built by Louis Zborowski in the early twenties. The first, built in ’21, featured a Mercedes chassis and a 23-​​litre Maybach engine and was so loud that the local council in Canterbury, where it was built, passed a by-​​law preventing it from being driven into town.

James Bond's Aston DB5

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010