Showing posts with label James Bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Bond. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 June 2022

Type 45 Destroyer

Day 9 of my Airfix 1:350 Type 45 Destroyer build and it’s complete 🎉

From a distance I’m really happy with this build.   It’s been great fun and challenging to construct, which I guess that’s what this hobby is all about. 


My attempts to fill some of the gaping joints were of mixed success and as these are most visible under the microscopic view of closeup photography, I’ve left these shots on the cutting room floor! 

I’ve finished this Type 45 air defence destroyer in the colours of HMS Dragon D35, one of the most advanced warships in the world and the star of the James Bond film No Time To Die! 

Thursday, 14 October 2021

Aston Martin DB5 - No Time To Die

I’ve made a number of these Airfix DB5 kits over the years and all have been a real disappointment. The kit is very basic and from original 1960s moulds, thus does not lend itself to producing a show room finish without considerable time and modelling skills, both of which I struggle with. Historically, I have also frustratingly been unable to avoid getting glue on the glass, something which this time, at least, I was determined to avoid!

After 18 months of intensive modelling, it’s hard not to improve one’s skills a little and this DB5 build is the first that I’ve been reasonably happy with. There was perhaps a bit more filling and sanding I could have done to hide the poor moulding, and my spraying, more suited to armoured fighting vehicles, would not will any concours prizes, but I avoided getting any glue on the glass!

 

The intent of this build was to recreate the DB5 seen in the 2021 James Bond film, “No Time To Die”, in which Bond drives for the 5th time since it was arrived on the scene for the “Gold Finger” film back in 1965. Bond’s DB5 goes through a number of subtle upgrades for each outing and on this occasion its Q Branch extras include bulletproof glass and Gatling guns behind the headlights. At the point in the film that Bond gets to deploy the guns, the DB5 has been involved in quite a destructive car chase in which both sides become very scratched. To recreate this look, I used chipping fluid. This was my first ever attempt at this weathering approach which worked quite well. To finish kit, I added a couple of Britains tractor drivers, reworked to look like James Bond and his female companion, and the guns were an aftermarket resin set for the F16 aircraft of the same scale. They are slightly larger than those used in the film, but fit perfectly in the space Airfix have provided to hold the lenses which will not be needed.

The final touch, as I intend to add it to my display at the forthcoming Yeovil Model Show, was to mount it on a wooden board, painted to reflect the iconic film poster.


Wednesday, 23 December 2020

James Bond's Autogyro "Little Nellie"

I thought, for my Christmas scale model build, I’d steer clear of anything military and share instead an iconic gadget from a James Bond film! For as far back as I can remember, before they became a commercial TV staple, Bond movies were a highlight in the Christmas & New Year TV schedule. It is for this memory that I make my excuse for building this Airfix 1:24 scale kit of Little Nellie, James Bond’s Autogiro from the 1967 film You Only Live Twice. As if I needed one! 

Airfix 1:24 scale Little Nellie

The model is Airfix's 1:24 scale kit, Little Nellie, James Bond’s Autogiro from the 1967 film You Only Live TwiceLittle Nellie, named after music hall star Nellie Wallace, who has a similar surname to its inventor, was a Wallis WA-116 Agile, a British autogyro developed in the early 1960s by former Royal Air Force Wing Commander Ken Wallis. In 1962, five WA-116s were built by Beagle Aircraft at Shoreham, three were for evaluation by the British Army Air Corps, one kept for Wallis’s own use while aircraft number G-ARZB went on to be transformed into Little Nellie.

Just wondering, if anyone ever used the British Army Air Corps decals! 

You Only Live Twice's film director, Lewis Gilbert, first got the idea to use this Bondlike piece of equipment in May 1966, after reading an article on the Russian-American autogiro expert, Igor Benson, in a Time Magazine. Coincidentally, and before a meeting could be set up with Igor, Ken Adam, Lewis's production designer, heard a BBC interview with Ken Wallace who was about to fly his autogyro for an Italian film company who were making their own spy movie, Dick Smart 2.007, in Brazil! Adam invited Wallis to Pinewood to demonstrate his autogyro and a deal was immediately struck. Shooting was to start in six weeks, so, while Beagle-built WA-116 G-ARZB was made more Bondlike, with various rockets and a new paint scheme, Wallis had just enough time to complete his Dick Smart commitment in Brazil, before joining Little Nellie in Kagoshima, Japan.

Q explains to Bond the additional features of Little Nellie

On 18th September 1966 the arial film unit, led by cameraman Johnny Jordan, started filming Little Nellie’s scene; a dogfight with four Bell H-13 helicopters over Mount Kirshima in Japan. 

These storyboards helped the aerial unit visualise the fight between
  Little Nellie and the SPECTRE helicopters.

The scene opens with Bond flying Little Nellie over a volcanic landscape in search of SPECTRE's secret base. Bond then sees the shadow of four helicopters closing in on his own. He's got company! 
 
The lead helicopter closes in and opens fire with its twin machine guns; you hear Little Nellie take glancing hits, but there's no serious damage. Bond lets it close further, to within range of his 2 rear facing flamethrowers, and with a push of a button the helicopter is engulfed in a fireball. 

Bond pulls back on the joystick to climb above the second and through the clear bubble canopy of the helicopter below, the SECTRE pilot looks up to sees a cloud of aerial mines, hung beneath little parachutes, floating down towards him. Multiple explosions rip the rota blades apart and the helicopter plummets to the ground. 

Dropping in behind the third attacker, Bond fires off a volley of bullets from the 2 forward facing machine guns, but being unable to sight the target within the guns 100 yard kill zone, they fail to hit. Bond, selects another switch, labelled Rocket Launcher. In doing so, a deadly stream of 14 incendiaries and high explosives are released, emptying the two launchers and obliterating the third helicopter.

Bond can't shake the fourth off his six, but Little Nellie has one final surprise for her attackers. The  last button Bond has available, is marked A-A Missiles. 2 heat seeking missiles lignite, race forward, and then turn, like dogs picking up a scent, through 180 degrees, and strike the last attack helicopter, head-on.

SPECTRE 0 : Little Nellie 4.  

Bond reports back to base, Bond reports back to base, “Little Nellie got a hot reception, 4 big shots made improper advances toward her, but defended her honour with great success"!


Airfix 1:24 scale Little Nellie

While the final cut gave the film franchise an audience pleasing visual hit, and another iconic Bond collectable, to join the Aston Martin DB5, it was not created without circumstance. Nine days into the shoot, on 27 September, there was an accident while filming one of the dogfight scenes. John Jordan was sitting with his feet on the skidoo the camera helicopter to film from the side when one of the SPECTRE helicopters flew in too close, slicing through the skid and Jordan's leg! The SPECTRE helicopter crashed into the mountainside, while the camera helicopter managed an unorthodox landing on stone blocks placed under the missing skid, John's foot, meanwhile, could not be saved. After being patched up by surgeons in Japan, it failed to properly heal, and so 6 months later, back in London, John asks for it to be amputated. This was not, however, the end for John Jordan's filming career. Fitted with a prosthetic foot, he was quickly back on set to film the the aerial sequences for both Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and Battle of Britain, produced by 007's Cubby Broccoli and Harry Saltzman, respectively. He even returns to complete the areal photography on next Bond epic, OHMSS.

Another James Bond Collectable - The Commemorative Little Nellie Stamp 17 March 2020 

The real life WA-116 was not without its own issues and although nearly all were used for research or demonstration flying by Wallis himself, the crash and the death of a test pilot, flying one of his autogyros at the Farnborough Air Show in 1970, led to Wallis finally withdrawing all his autogyros from use by anyone other than himself. Little Nellie (G-ARZB) is apparently still airworthy and was still being flown by Wallis right up until his death in 2013.

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The model


Brand: Airfix
Title: James Bond's Autogyro
Number: 04401
Scale: 1:24
Released: 1967 | Rebox 1996)

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