AutosVeh AutosVeh
pre-facelift Tesla Model Electric vehicles make CEO Elon Musk Advertising Emanuele Carando Mercedes-Benz United States Volvo long-awaited electric Porsche Panamera lineup

It Took Rolls-Royce Three Years To Build This One-of-One Phantom

It Took Rolls-Royce Three Years To Build This One-of-One Phantom

And concealing in a “secret” console compartment made especially for this Phantom, a honest-to-goodness strong gold bar shaped like Phantom Speedform. Rolls-Royce makes no reference of rate, however with gold presently marketing for $2,750 an ounce, that bar alone could be half a million dollars.

Talking of gold, this Phantom has it all over. Open up the glovebox and you’ll find even more gold, this time debossed with a quote from Auric Goldfinger, Bond’s nemesis in the movie. In the trunk, there’s a gold-plated golf club matching the one Goldfinger used.

The yellow-black outside is an excellent match to the screen-used 1937 Phantom III. And it was all done for a “significant” Rolls-Royce customer in England, so do not expect to see any kind of even more like this.

It took Rolls-Royce Bespoke 3 years to complete this job. In the film, Bond tails the bad guy’s Rolls-Royce via the pass, yet this isn’t the only reference to the legendary place. And, of course, the celebrities send out gold light.

Rolls-Royce does not shy away from interesting one-off tasks, as shown by this two-tone Phantom. It bears a striking resemblance to the 1937 Rolls-Royce Phantom III included in the James Bond movie Goldfinger, and that’s certainly no accident.

Rolls-Royce developed an imaginary map of Fort Knox (Goldfinger’s supreme target) for picnic tables included with the car. That alone took 6 months to produce, and while you’re nosing around in the trunk, you’ll see the 007 logo design projected onto the flooring. This is a nod to the monitoring device Bond placed in Goldfinger’s trunk, and the renowned door-mount umbrellas have the exact same color scheme as those in the motion picture.

“Bringing Phantom Goldfinger into being was among the Bespoke Collective’s greatest innovative trips to day,” stated Nick Rhodes, Bespoke developer at Rolls-Royce. “The whimsical and elegant attributes that reference the movie’s most memorable moments are a charming presentation of the power of Bespoke in adding a brand-new phase to an existing tale.”

Rolls-Royce does not shy away from interesting one-off jobs, as shown by this two-tone Phantom. It births a striking similarity to the 1937 Rolls-Royce Phantom III featured in the James Bond flick Goldfinger, and that’s certainly no accident. Speaking of gold, this Phantom has it almost everywhere. And concealing in a “secret” console compartment made particularly for this Phantom, a honest-to-goodness solid gold bar shaped like Phantom Speedform. The yellow-black exterior is an ideal match to the screen-used 1937 Phantom III.

1 Bringing Phantom Goldfinger
2 interesting one-off projects
3 Phantom Goldfinger
4 Phantom Scintilla