Imagine buying a forgotten container without knowing its
contents, only to find it contains one of the greatest
movie cars of all-time.
That's what happened to one couple in 1989, finding the legendary Lotus Esprit
submarine, driven by Roger Moore in the 1977 James Bond flick, "The Spy
Who Loved Me."
The car, known as 'Wet Nellie" during filming,
originally cost around $100,000 (about $500,000 in today's money), and is now
heading to RM Auctions in London. Created by Perry Oceanographic, from Riviera
Beach, Fla., it was one of six Lotus Esprit body shells used in the movie, but
remains the only car to be built into a fully operational, self-propelled
submarine. Retired U.S. Navy SEAL Don Griffin piloted 007's rig, maneuvering
the vehicle using motorized propellers.
After filming its underwater scenes in the Bahamas, the car
was shipped to Long Island, N.Y., where it sat in an unassuming storage
container paid in advance for ten years. After the rental eventually became
delinquent, it went up for blind auction and sold for a modest fee, providing a
lucky couple with a windfall and creating the greatest unfilmed episode of
"Storage Wars" ever.
While the famous Bond submarine spent a brief stint at the
Petersen Automotive Museum, it has mainly been kept under wraps. RM Auctions
sold Sean Connery's iconic Aston Martin DB5 from "Goldfinger" and
"Thunderball" in 2010 for $4.4 million, and while that particular
vehicle is perhaps the most esteemed car in movie history, it provides a good
indication of where 007's watery Lotus may ultimately land.
Max Girardo, Managing Director, RM Auctions, Europe, says:
"Over the years, millions of moviegoers have stared in awe as the Lotus
transformed itself into a submarine, and now, perhaps one of them will have an
opportunity to own it." One things for sure: It'll have to be a moviegoer
swimming in money.
Yahoo
1 comment:
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