A Look Back at 7 Cars That the Late Sean Connery Made Famous as 007
                     Although the Scottish actor died last weekend, these vehicles will always remind us of his unique style and presence.
                                                                         By 
Howard Walker, 
Viju Mathew              
  
                      
     
Photo: Courtesy of Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings plc. 
                                                     
 Sean Connery and that Silver Birch Aston Martin DB5 will always be the 007 match made in Heaven. But in the seven 
James Bond blockbusters that the Academy Award–winning actor starred in—from 
Dr. No in 1962 to the unofficial 
Never Say Never Again in  1983—he slipped, slid and occasionally crunched an array of  four-wheeled machinery. The following Bond cars were made famous by Sir  Thomas Sean Connery, who died last Saturday at the age of 90.
  
Photo : Photo: Courtesy of Eon Productions.
1961 Sunbeam Alpine—Dr. No (1962)
It  was the first Bond car in the first Bond movie. The baby-blue,  white-walled Sunbeam Alpine was the vehicle agent 007 rents when he  lands in Jamaica on the trail of Dr. Julius No, the reclusive member of  SPECTRE.
 With a budget of less than $1 million, and no automakers eager to  offer a freebie, the British-built 1961 Alpine II was borrowed from a  Jamaican local. In the film, Connery is pursued by Dr. No’s henchmen—in a  1930s LaSalle hearse of all things—and escapes by driving the low-slung  Sunbeam under a crane. The drop-top, gadget-free Alpine proved to be an  excellent choice as it gave cinema-goers a good look at the new Bond in  action.
Photo : Photo: Courtesy of Eon Productions.
1935 Drophead 3.5 Litre Bentley Mark IV—From Russia With Love (1963)
Found in the 1963 movie From Russia with Love, the 1935 Drophead 3.5 Litre 
Bentley  Mark IV is the closest car to what author Ian Fleming had Bond  originally drive in the first book, Casino Royale—a 1931 Bentley 4.5  Litre. The 1935 model had a 110 hp, straight-six engine under the hood  and was capable of 90 mph.
 Perfect for an open-air drive in the country, the classic convertible  may have scored him points with the ladies, but a Bentley would not  appear on screen again with Bond until a less spry Sean Connery reprised  his role in 1983 with Never Say Never Again.
 
Photo : Photo: Courtesy of Eon Productions.
1964 Aston Martin DB5—Goldfinger (1964) and Thunderball (1965)
The  marque most associated with Her Majesty’s Secret Service, Aston Martin  has had numerous models appear in a majority of the 25 official films to  date—beginning with the 1964 Aston Martin DB5 in the Academy  Award–winning Goldfinger. The most iconic car of the franchise, the  classic two-seat coupe features an aluminum 282 hp, 4-liter,  straight-six engine—coupled with a five-speed transmission—and is able  to accelerate from zero to 60 mph in 8 seconds, reaching a top speed of  145 mph. Not part of the standard package, however, was its revolving  license plate, bulletproof windshield, machine guns, oil-slick and  smoke-screen devices, and, of course, the passenger-side ejector seat.
 Two 1965 DB5s were used during filming and marked the start of Aston  Martin’s long relationship with Eon Productions and Bond. The DB5 has  later appeared in Thunderball, plus the non-Connery films GoldenEye,  Tomorrow Never Dies, The World Is Not Enough, Casino Royale, Skyfall,  and Spectre—at least that’s the list so far.
 But the car synonymous with the covert operative is now available to a  few fortunate collectors. Aston Martin is currently producing 25  examples of its 
DB5 Goldfinger Continuation, authentic replicas complete with the tradecraft accouterments of the film version, and all for roughly $3.6 million.
 
Photo : Photo: Courtesy of EON Productions.
1967 Toyota 2000GT—You Only Live Twice (1967)
A rare breed indeed, the topless 1967 
Toyota  2000GT that was featured in You Only Live Twice (released the same  year) was one of only two made. When filming started, it became obvious  that Sean Connery was too tall for the original hardtop version intended  for the film, so Toyota quickly readied the rare roadster. As it was,  only 351 examples of the two-seat coupe—considered to be Japan’s first  high-performance sports car—were ever produced.
 Sitting in the passenger seat while the beautiful Japanese SIS agent  Aki evaded villains, Bond was probably enamored with the car’s 150 hp,  2-liter, straight-six engine and top speed of 135 mph—not to mention the  onboard closed-circuit television, two-way radios, and voice-controlled  electronics. The appeal runs in the blood; current 007 actor Daniel  Craig has claimed that the 2000GT is his favorite Bond car.
 
Photo : Photo: Courtesy of EON Productions.
1971 Mustang Mach 1—Diamonds are Forever (1971)
From Diamonds  Are Forever, the 1971 Mustang Mach 1 will forever be remembered for  pulling off the impossible—or so it seemed. As Bond and Tiffany Case  flee the Willard Whyte Space Labs in the Nevada Desert, they evade  police through the streets of Las Vegas, and make their final escape by  barely driving through a narrow alley with room to roll on only the  car’s right tires. When exiting the alley, however, the car is  miraculously on its left side.
 The continuity error does not detract from the car’s muscular  aesthetic that includes twin ram-air intakes on the hood, which  bolstered the already beefy 370 hp, 429 Cobra Jet V-8 engine underneath.  Several of the now-famous fastbacks were used in filming, and each  surviving one is worth more than a few diamonds today.
 
Photo : Photo: Courtesy of Eon Productions.
1970 Triumph Stag—Diamonds are Forever (1971)
Blink  and you’ll miss it, but for the 1971 romp Diamonds Are Forever, Connery  gets behind the wheel of a British-built Triumph Stag convertible for a  drive to Amsterdam.
 If you remember the scene, the mustardy-yellow Stag is owned by  diamond smuggler Peter Franks, who gets nabbed at passport control  leaving the UK. Connery assumes his identity, crosses the English  Channel on a hovercraft and is next seen driving the car through the  canal-lined streets of the Dutch capital. Interestingly, the 007 Stag  was sold at a 1998 Christie’s auction for just £20,700, or roughly  $33,000 at the time.
 
Photo : photo: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.
1937 BENTLEY 4 1/4 Litre Drophead Coupé —Never Say Never Again (1983)
After  saying “never again” to playing 007, Connery was lured back to being  shaken, not stirred, for the 1983 unofficial Bond escapade, Never Say  Never Again, from Warner Brothers. His car of choice is an oh-so-elegant  1937 Bentley 4 1/4 Litre Drophead Coupé with custom bodywork by  England’s Gurney Nutting coachbuilders.
 The car makes an all-too brief cinematic appearance, with Connery  arriving at the Shrublands health clinic. After the film, the Bentley  was eventually restored and sold in at a Bonhams auction for $286,599 in  2010.