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TechRadar
2022-10-07T11:07:14Z
The best James Bond gadgets, With No Time To Die here, we have jumped back into classic James Bond movies by focusing on his best gadgets. It's an essential part of the James Bond screen experience – the cool, frequently lethal tech that helps Her Majesty's secret servant save the world. Here's...
Attaché Case – From Russia With Love (1963), Bond may have used a standard issue geiger counter in Dr. No, but this black leather attaché case is the first true gadget of the franchise, establishing the trope of an everyday object loaded with lethal surprises. Concealed inside are 20 rounds of...
Aston Martin DB5 – Goldfinger (1964), Yes, we know, technically it's a vehicle. But there's an argument to be made that this gleaming silver beast is the greatest gadget of all, one giant Swiss Army knife of a car. The passenger ejector seat's a design classic, of course, but other road-ruling...
Mini-breathing device – Thunderball (1965), Bond heads underwater in his fourth big-screen adventure, pitched against man-eating sharks and the harpoon-crazed hordes of SPECTRE. Filled with an emergency oxygen supply, this gizmo allows him to breathe for up to four minutes. The British Navy were...
Rolex watch – Live And Let Die (1973), This Rolex Submariner 5513 is an object of desire in itself. Q's cunning modifications make it even more of an aspirational timepiece. The watch generates a magnetic field capable of deflecting a bullet at long range – and, more intimately, unzipping a dress...
Seiko watch – The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), Bond had already embraced the quartz crystal revolution, rocking the digital Hamilton Pulsar P2 in Live And Let Die. This upgrade includes a personal messaging device that spews a strip of ticker-tape, informing him that world-saving duty awaits. Sure,...
Identigraph – For Your Eyes Only (1981), Roger Moore's fifth mission as 007 puts the gadgetry on the back burner, opting for a more grounded vibe after the space shuttles and laser-rifle skirmishes of Moonraker. This piece of Q-tech feels just on the edge of possibility for 1981, able to generate...
Fountain pen – Octopussy (1983), This upmarket Montblanc fountain pen is crammed with espionage-friendly goodness. Its slim 18 carat-plated exterior hides a receiver that allows Bond to track the plot-crucial whereabouts of a Fabergé egg. An earpiece works in conjunction with the bug in the egg,...
Camera ring – A View To A Kill (1985), Now here's an old school item of spycraft. Infiltrating a party at Max Zorin's estate, Bond uses a concealed camera to take photographs of the crooked industrialist's noteworthy acquaintances. The peek-a-boo lens is encased in a fake jewel, mounted on a...
Bug-detecting shaver – A View to a Kill (1985), It's one of the occupational hazards of any spy's life: the innocent-seeming hotel room that's wired for sound by the opposition. In the early films Sean Connery would conduct a manual sweep of his surroundings, peering under lampshades and checking...
Exploding key-fob – The Living Daylights (1987), Novelty key-fobs that bleeped when you whistled at them were a tedious fad in the ‘80s. The Bond version is a little more ingenious, naturally. Another weaponized piece of Philips product placement, it billows stun gas when you whistle the opening...
Signature gun – Licence To Kill (1989), For once it's Q who goes rogue, heading to Mexico to equip Bond, who's been stripped of his license while pursuing a personal vendetta against a local drug lord. MI6's gadget king smuggles in such delights as a laser-firing polaroid camera and exploding...
Exploding pen – GoldenEye (1995), For his debut mission Pierce Brosnan is provisioned with this seemingly innocuous Parker. In reality it incorporates a class four grenade – enough to ruffle even Pierce's coiffure. It's armed by clicking the pen three times in quick succession. Three more rapid...
Ericsson phone – Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), The mobile phone phenomenon finally makes its presence felt in the Bond universe. This multi-tasking Ericsson scans fingerprints and shoots a laser beam capable of cutting through steel. The antenna is detachable and doubles as a lockpick while a...
X-ray specs – The World is Not Enough (1999), Forget that plastic tat with the swirly lenses. Making good on all those comic book ads that traded on the dreams of gullible readers – only $1 plus 25¢ postage and packing! – these blue-tinted miracle-goggles allow Bond to scan a room to see who's...
Sonic ring – Die Another Day (2002), More formally itemised as a "single digit sonic activator unit", this rather tacky bit of finger-ornamentation actually
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