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Bullet-proof: Ian Fleming to Eon Productions

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Category: Rolex

Last week we talked price history on a James Bond watch model released new 10 years ago.

Today we’re gonna go back to the very first James Bond watch, dated 50 years ago — and worn by 007 creator Ian Fleming.

Like so many Rolex references, not all 1016 Explorer watches are the same. When it comes to the original literary James Bond watch, one of the key distinguishing features is the radium-226 dial. This was provided for only the first few years. On top of that, a great many of them were switched out in favor of those featuring safer paints and sometimes just for perceived better aesthetics.

The year it was revealed through my February 2008 WatchTime article exactly what watch Ian Fleming had specified for his literary James Bond character, the largest number of Rolex 1016 Explorer timekeepers I’ve seen since was sold (see James Bond Watches Price Guide 2011).

Average price: $4,800 US.

In 2010, James Bond Rolex 1016 Explorer pricing had jumped to just under $6,000 and had become more scarce.

Last year, these watches were selling for well-over $7,300 and at approximately the same volume.

I can’t establish cause-and-effect between continue reading…

The first James Bond watch seen in the movies was filmed for Dr No, 50 years ago today

The first James Bond watch seen in the movies was filmed for Dr No, 50 years ago today

The James Bond Films by Steven Jay Rubin is my preferred source of shooting schedule references for the early Eon Productions 007 movies.

But now that we have an “official” history from Eon Productions itself via @007 on Twitter, it seems only appropriate to nail down some of the most important dates vis-à-vis information they’ve just provided.

Around 4:00 am EST (US) today, @007 Tweeted: “ON THIS DAY IN BOND HISTORY: 1962, shooting was completed on the first scene in which 007 says, ‘Bond. James Bond’ in DR. NO.”

Indeed!

Experts generally agree that this was a vitally important scene to introduce James Bond, to establish Sean Connery as on-screen incarnation of Ian Flemings by then already hugely successful literary character.

As director Terence Young said in his so-called “banned” commentary for The Criterion Collection CAV LaserDisc release of Dr No, attention to detail was never greater than in preparation and filming for this scene. Cigarette case. Reveal. Timing of line delivery.

And, as readers of this James Bond Watches Blog know: The view of the Rolex Precision wristwatch that Sean Connery was wearing continue reading…

Although I'd actually identified all distinguishing details of the original literary James Bond watch in early 2008, it would be another full year before this discovery was published in WatchTime magazine

Although I'd actually identified all distinguishing details of the original literary James Bond watch in early 2008, it would be another full year before this discovery was published in WatchTime magazine

It’s been 4 solid years since my discovery of the literary James Bond watch — in 2008.

The photo shown here was taken of Ian Fleming’s personal Rolex Explorer wristwatch upon receipt by the Imperial War Museum in London. Merely for record-keeping, inauspiciously captured without any special lighting, on a well-used art table.

Quite appropriate, I think.

Museum staff in turn provided this image to me as the first for use in definitive identification as the exact watch Ian Fleming specified for James Bond in the novel On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (Jonathan Cape, 1963).

My original research, interviews, and findings on this original James Bond watch were published a year later, in the February 2009 issue of WatchTime magazine.

Here are some of the highlights:

Ian Fleming’s stepdaughter, Fionn Morgan, stated that this was the only Rolex watch the Bond author ever owned.

The “expanding metal bracelet” on this watch does not have spring-based links. The reference was meant to describe its deployant clasp.

Although the Ian Fleming Rolex Explorer has been photographed as recently as 5 years ago with original dial intact, it has never been publicly displayed with that dial. This made it impossible to accurately identify the watch by merely viewing it on display at the Imperial War Museum (where it first appeared, for a year, during the Ian Fleming Centenary).

Caseback date and “more likely of two possible” case / serial numbers were made available.

Additionally— this “original literary James Bond watch” continue reading…