The film's plot has Bond investigating the gold magnate Auric Goldfinger, who plans to contaminate theUnited States Bullion Depository atFort Knox.Goldfinger was the first Bond film to take over $100 million, with a budget equal to that of the two preceding films combined. Principal photography took place from January to July 1964 in the United Kingdom, Switzerland and the United States.
Goldfinger was heralded as the film in the franchise where James Bond "comes into focus".[3] Many elements introduced in it appeared in many of the later James Bond films, such as the extensive use of technology and gadgets by Bond, an extensive pre-credits sequence that stood largely alone from the main plot, multiple foreign locales andtongue-in-cheek humour. The film's release led to a number of promotional licensed tie-in items, including a toyAston Martin DB5 car fromCorgi Toys, which became one of the biggest-selling toys of the 1960s,[4][5] and an image of the gold-painted Eaton on the cover ofLife.
Goldfinger was the first Bond film to win anAcademy Award (forBest Sound Editing) and opened to largely favourable critical reception. The film was a financial success, recouping its budget in two weeks and grossing over $120 million worldwide. In 1999, it was ranked 70th on theBFI Top 100 British films list.
Aerial view of the U.S. Gold Bullion Depository at Fort Knox
MI6 agent James Bond destroys adrug laboratory and electrocutes an antagonist in a bath inLatin America. Bond then heads toMiami Beach, where his superior,M, throughCIA agentFelix Leiter, directs Bond to observebullion dealerAuric Goldfinger at ahotel in Miami Beach. Bond discovers Goldfinger cheating at a high-stakesgin rummy game, aided by his employee Jill Masterson. Bond interrupts Jill and blackmails Goldfinger into losing. After an evening with Jill, Bond is knocked out by Goldfinger's Korean manservantOddjob. Bond awakens to find Jill covered in gold paint, dead from skin suffocation.
In London, M tasks Bond with determining how Goldfinger smuggles gold internationally.Q supplies Bond with a modifiedAston Martin DB5 and two tracking devices. Bond plays a round ofgolf with Goldfinger at his country club inKent, using a bar of recoveredNazi gold supplied to him by theBank of England. Goldfinger attempts to cheat, but Bond tricks him into losing the match. Goldfinger warns Bond against interfering in his affairs, and Oddjob demonstrates his formidable strength, along with a steel-brimmed hat. Planting a tracker in Goldfinger's car, Bond follows him toSwitzerland and meets Jill's sister Tilly, who tries to assassinate Goldfinger but is stopped by Bond.
Bond sneaks into Goldfinger's refinery in Switzerland and overhears him telling Chinesenuclear physicist Ling that he incorporates gold into the bodywork of hisRolls-Royce Phantom III to smuggle out ofEngland. Bond also overhears Goldfinger mention "Operation Grand Slam" and encounters Tilly, who again tries to kill Goldfinger. An alarm is tripped, and Oddjob kills Tilly with his hat while Bond is captured, strapped to a table and menaced with an overhead industrial laser. Bond lies to Goldfinger that MI6 knows about Operation Grand Slam and Goldfinger spares his life.Pussy Galore, a pilot, flies the captive Bond to Goldfinger'sstud farm nearLexington, Kentucky in a private jet.
Bond escapes his cell and witnesses Goldfinger's meeting with severalAmerican Mafia bosses, who have supplied materials to Goldfinger for Operation Grand Slam and have been promised $1 million each. The plan involves breaking into theUS Bullion Depository atFort Knox after incapacitating the troops stationed there. He promises to pay the criminals $10 million each if the scheme succeeds, but they ridicule his plan; one of them, Mr. Solo, demands to be paid immediately and leaves before the others are fatally gassed. Bond is captured by Pussy but attempts to alert the CIA by planting his other tracker in Solo's pocket as he leaves.
Oddjob kills Solo and puts his body through acar crusher, destroying both it and the tracker. Bond confronts Goldfinger over the implausibility of moving the gold and Goldfinger agrees. Bond deduces from Ling's presence that the Chinese government has provided adirty bomb to irradiate the gold, making it unusable for decades; Goldfinger's bullion will increase in value and the Chinese will gain power from the resulting economic meltdown. Operation Grand Slam begins with Pussy's pilot troupe spraying gas over Fort Knox, seemingly knocking out the troops.
Goldfinger's private army breaks into Fort Knox and accesses the vault as Goldfinger arrives in a helicopter with the bomb. In the vault, Goldfinger's henchman Kisch handcuffs Bond to the bomb. Unknown to Goldfinger, Bond persuaded Pussy to alert the authorities and replace the gas with a harmless substance. Goldfinger locks the vault with Bond, Oddjob and Kisch inside. When the US Army attacks, Goldfinger kills Ling and escapes. Oddjob throws Kisch off a gangway after he tries to escape the vault. Bond frees himself with Kisch's key, fights Oddjob, and eventually electrocutes him. Although Bond forces open the casing of the bomb, he is unsure of how to disarm it.
After killing Goldfinger's men, US troops open the vault, and a specialist shuts off the bomb just before it can detonate. Bond boards a jet to have lunch with the President at theWhite House, but Goldfingerhijacks the plane, tying up the crew in the hangar and putting Pussy in the cockpit. Bond and Goldfinger fight for Goldfinger's gun, which fires, shattering a window and creating anexplosive decompression that blows Goldfinger out of the plane. Bond and Pussy parachute to safety and end up floating in an inflatable raft on the ocean. Leiter's search helicopter passes over the pair; Pussy tries to alert him, but Bond playfully declares, "This is no time to be rescued," and draws the parachute over them.
Sean Connery asJames Bond (007), an MI6 agent who is sent to investigate Auric Goldfinger. Connery reprised the role of Bond for the third time in a row. His salary rose, but a pay dispute later broke out during filming. After he suffered a back injury when filming the scene where Oddjob knocks Bond unconscious in Miami, the dispute was settled: Eon and Connery agreed to a deal where the actor would receive 5% of the gross of each Bond film he starred in.[6]
Honor Blackman asPussy Galore, Goldfinger's personal pilot and leader of an all-female team of pilots known as Pussy Galore's Flying Circus. Blackman was selected for the role of Pussy Galore because of her role as the skilled judoka Cathy Gale inThe Avengers, for which she had received martial arts training.[7] The script was rewritten to make Pussy Galore ajudoka as well.[8] The character's name follows in the tradition of other Bond girls' names that aredouble entendres. Concerned about American censors, the producers thought about changing the character's name to "Kitty Galore",[9] but they and Hamilton decided "if you were a ten-year old boy and knew what the name meant, you weren't a ten-year old boy, you were a dirty little bitch. The American censor was concerned, but we got round that by inviting him and his wife out to dinner and [told him] we were big supporters of theRepublican Party."[10] During promotion, Blackman took delight in embarrassing interviewers by repeatedly mentioning the character's name.[11] While the American censors did not interfere with the name in the film, they refused to allow the name "Pussy Galore" to appear on promotional materials and for the American market she was subsequently called "Miss Galore" or "Goldfinger's personal pilot".[12]
Gert Fröbe asAuric Goldfinger, a wealthy, psychopathic[13] man obsessed with gold.Orson Welles was considered as Goldfinger, but his financial demands were too high;[14]Theodore Bikel andTitos Vandis auditioned for the role, but failed.[15] Fröbe was cast because the producers saw his performance as a child molester in the German filmIt Happened in Broad Daylight (1958).[7] Fröbe, who spoke little English, said his linesphonetically, but was too slow. Toredub him, he had to double the speed of his performance to get the right tempo.[10] The only time his real voice is heard is during his meeting with members of the Mafia at Auric Stud. Bond is hidden below the model of Fort Knox whilst Fröbe's natural voice can be heard above. However, he was redubbed for the rest of the film by TV actorMichael Collins.[7] The match is widely praised as one of the most successful dubs in cinema history.[16][17]
Shirley Eaton as Jill Masterson, a Bond girl and Goldfinger'saide-de-camp, whom Bond catches helping the villain cheat at a game of cards. Eaton was sent by her agent to meet Harry Saltzman and agreed to take the part if the nudity was done tastefully. It took an hour and a half to apply the paint to her body.[10] Although only a small part in the film, the image of her painted gold was renowned and Eaton appeared as such on the 6 November 1964 cover ofLife magazine.[18][19]
Harold Sakata asOddjob, Goldfinger's lethal Korean manservant. Director Guy Hamilton cast Sakata, an Olympic silver medalist weightlifter, as Oddjob after seeing him on a wrestling programme.[7] Hamilton called him an "absolutely charming man", and found that "he had a very unique way of moving, [so] in creating Oddjob I used all of Harold's own characteristics".[20] Sakata was badly burned when filming his death scene, in which Oddjob was electrocuted by Bond. He, however, kept holding onto the hat with determination, despite his pain, until the director called "Cut!".[6] Oddjob has been described as "a wordless role, but one of cinema's great villains."[21]
Bernard Lee asM, 007's boss and head of the British Secret Service.
Martin Benson as Mr. Solo, the lone gangster who refused to take part in Operation Grand Slam. The surname Solo was re-used by Ian Fleming when he was briefly involved in creating the character Napoleon Solo for the American TV seriesThe Man from U.N.C.L.E., which led to a threatened lawsuit by Bond producers Broccoli and Saltzman, forcing Fleming to back out of the series.
Cec Linder asFelix Leiter, Bond'sCIA liaison in the United States. Linder was the only actor actually on location in Miami.[22] Linder's interpretation of Leiter was that of a somewhat older man than the way the character was played byJack Lord inDr. No; in reality, Linder was a year younger than Lord. According to screenwriterRichard Maibaum, Lord demanded co-star billing, a bigger role and more money to reprise the role[23] inGoldfinger, which led the producers to recast the part. At the last minute, Cec Linder switched roles withAustin Willis, who played cards with Goldfinger.[24]
Bill Nagy as Mr Jed Midnight, the gangster whose contributions Goldfinger says helped smuggle the nerve gas across the Canadian border
Desmond Llewelyn is not credited in the opening sequence, but he playsQ, the head of Q-branch. Hamilton told him to inject humour into the character, thus beginning the friendly antagonism between Q and Bond that became a hallmark of the series.[22] He had already appeared in the previous Bond film,From Russia with Love, and, with the exception ofLive and Let Die, would continue to play Q in the next 16 Bond films.
Michael Mellinger portrayed Kisch, Goldfinger's secondary and quiet henchman and loyal lieutenant who leads his boss's fake Army convoy to Fort Knox.Nadja Regin played Bonita, a dancer who sets a trap for Bond in the pre-credit sequence.Burt Kwouk portrayed Ling, theCommunist Chinese nuclear fission specialist.Richard Vernon played Colonel Smithers, aBank of England official.Margaret Nolan played Dink, Bond's masseuse from the Miami hotel sequence. (Vernon and Nolan both appeared inA Hard Day's Night that same year.) Nolan also appeared as the gold-covered body in advertisements for the film[9] and in the opening title sequence as the golden silhouette, described as "Gorgeous, iconic, seminal".[25]Gerry Duggan portrays Hawker, Bond's golf caddy.
WhileFrom Russia with Love was in production,Richard Maibaum began working on the script forOn Her Majesty's Secret Service as the intended next film in the series, but with the release date set for September 1964 there was not enough time to prepare for location shooting inSwitzerland and that adaptation was put on hold.[26][27] With thecourt case betweenKevin McClory and Fleming surroundingThunderball still in the High Court, producersAlbert R. Broccoli andHarry Saltzman turned toGoldfinger as the third Bond film.[28]Goldfinger had what was then considered a large budget of $3 million (US$30 million in 2024 dollars[29]), the equivalent of the budgets ofDr. No andFrom Russia with Love combined, and was the first Bond film classified as a box-office blockbuster.[7]Goldfinger was chosen with theNorth American cinema market in mind, as the previous films had concentrated on theCaribbean andEurope.[30]
Terence Young, who had directed the previous two films, chose to filmThe Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders instead, after a pay dispute[6] that saw him denied a percentage of the film's profits.[31] Broccoli and Saltzman turned instead toGuy Hamilton to direct. Hamilton, who had turned down directingDr. No,[32] felt that he needed to make Bond less of a "superman" by making the villains seem more powerful.[33] Hamilton knew Fleming; both had been involved in intelligence matters in theRoyal Navy during theSecond World War.[34]Goldfinger saw the return of two crew members who were not involved withFrom Russia with Love:Bob Simmons asstunt coordinator andproduction designerKen Adam.[35] Both played crucial roles in the development ofGoldfinger, with Simmons choreographing the fight sequence between Bond and Oddjob in the vault of Fort Knox, which was not just seen as one of the best Bond fights, but also "must stand as one of the great cinematic combats",[36] while Adam's design efforts onGoldfinger were "luxuriantly baroque"[37] and have resulted in the film being called "one of his finest pieces of work".[18]
Richard Maibaum, who co-wrote the previous films, returned to adapt the seventh Bond novel. Maibaum fixed the novel's heavily criticisedplot hole, where Goldfinger actually attempts to empty Fort Knox. In the film, Bond notes it would take twelve days for Goldfinger to steal the gold, before the villain reveals he actually intends to irradiate it with the then-topical concept of aRed Chinese atomic bomb.[33] However, Harry Saltzman disliked the first draft as being "tooAmerican", and brought inPaul Dehn to revise it.[33][26] Dehn was himself a former intelligence operative, a political warfare officer in theSpecial Operations Executive duringWorld War II.[38] Hamilton said Dehn "brought out the British side of things".[39] Connery disliked his draft, so Maibaum returned.[33] Dehn also suggested thepre-credit sequence be an action scene with no relevance to the actual plot.[7] Maibaum, however, based the pre-credit sequence on the opening scene of the novel, where Bond is waiting atMiami Airport contemplating his recent killing of a Latin American drug smuggler.[40]Wolf Mankowitz, an un-credited screenwriter onDr. No, suggested the scene where Oddjob puts his car into acar crusher to dispose of Mr. Solo's body.[6] Because of the quality of work of Maibaum and Dehn, the script and outline forGoldfinger became the blueprint for future Bond films.[41]
Principal photography commenced on 20 January 1964 inMiami Beach, Florida, at theFontainebleau Hotel; the crew was small, consisting only of Hamilton, Broccoli, Adam and cinematographerTed Moore. Connery never travelled to Florida to film because he was shootingMarnie[8] elsewhere in the United States. On the DVDaudio commentary, director Hamilton states that other than Linder, who played Felix Leiter, none of the main actors in the Miami sequence were actually there. Connery, Fröbe, Eaton, Nolan, who played Dink, and Willis, who played Goldfinger's card victim, all filmed their parts on a soundstage atPinewood Studios when filming moved. Miami also served as location to the scenes involving Leiter's pursuit of Oddjob.[42]
After five days in the US,[43] production returned to England. The primary location wasPinewood Studios, home to, among other sets, a recreation of the Fontainebleau, theSouth American city of the pre-title sequence and both Goldfinger's estate and factory.[22][7][8] Three places near the studio were used:Black Park for the car chase involving Bond's Aston Martin and Goldfinger's henchmen inside the factory complex,RAF Northolt for the American airports[42] andStoke Park Club for the golf club scene.[44]
The end of the chase, when Bond's Aston Martin crashes into a wall because of the mirror, as well as the chase immediately preceding it, were filmed on the road at the rear of Pinewood Studios Sound Stages A and E and the Prop Store. The road is now called Goldfinger Avenue.[45]London Southend Airport was used for the scene where Goldfinger flies to Switzerland.[42] Ian Fleming visited the set ofGoldfinger in April 1964; he died a few months later in August 1964, shortly before the film's release.[7] Thesecond unit filmed in Kentucky, and these shots were edited into scenes filmed at Pinewood.[22]
Connery with co-starTania Mallet during filming in Switzerland
Principal photography then moved toSwitzerland, with the car chase being filmed at the small curved roads nearRealp, the exterior of thePilatus Aircraft factory inStans serving as Goldfinger's factory, and Tilly Masterson's attempt to snipe Goldfinger being shot in theFurka Pass.[42] Filming wrapped on 11 July atAndermatt, after nineteen weeks of shooting.[46] Just three weeks prior to the film's release, Hamilton and a small team, which included Broccoli's stepson and future producerMichael G. Wilson as assistant director, went for last-minute shoots in Kentucky. Extra people were hired for post-production issues such as dubbing so the film could be finished in time.[8][47]
Broccoli earned permission to film in the Fort Knox area with the help of his friend,Lt. ColonelCharles Russhon.[8][47] To shoot Pussy Galore's Flying Circus gassing the soldiers, the pilots were only allowed to fly above 3,000 feet. Hamilton recalled this was "hopeless", so they flew at about 500 feet, and "the military went absolutely ape".[10] The scenes of people fainting involved the same set of soldiers moving to different locations.[47]
For security reasons, filming and photography were not allowed near or inside theUnited States Bullion Depository. All sets for the interiors of the building were designed and built from scratch at Pinewood Studios.[7] The filmmakers had no clue as to what the interior of the depository looked like, soKen Adam's imagination provided the idea of stacks of gold ingots behind iron bars. Adam later toldThe Guardian that "no one was allowed in Fort Knox but because [producer] Cubby Broccoli had some good connections and the Kennedys loved Ian Fleming's books I was allowed to fly over it once. It was quite frightening – they had machine guns on the roof. I was also allowed to drive around the perimeter but if you got out of the car there was a loudspeaker warning you to keep away. There was not a chance of going in it, and I was delighted because I knew from going to the Bank of England vaults that gold isn't stacked very high and it's all underwhelming. It gave me the chance to show the biggest gold repository in the world as I imagined it, with gold going up to heaven. I came up with this cathedral-type design. I had a big job to persuade Cubby and the director Guy Hamilton at first."[48]
Saltzman disliked the design's resemblance to a prison, but Hamilton liked it enough that it was built.[49] Thecomptroller of Fort Knox later sent a letter to Adam and the production team, complimenting them on their imaginative depiction of the vault.[7] United Artists even had irate letters from people wondering "how could a British film unit be allowed inside Fort Knox?"[49] Adam recalled, "In the end I was pleased that I wasn't allowed into Fort Knox, because it allowed me to do whatever I wanted."[10] In fact, the set was deemed so realistic that Pinewood Studios had to post a 24-hour guard to keep the gold bar props from being stolen. Another element which was original was the atomic device, for which Hamilton requested the special effects crew get inventive instead of realistic.[47] Technician Bert Luxford described the result as looking like an "engineering work", with a spinning engine, achronometer and other decorative pieces.[50]
TwoAston Martin DB5s were built for production, one of which had no gadgets.
"Before [Goldfinger], gadgets were not really a part of Bond's world," Hamilton remarked.Production designer Ken Adam chose the DB5 because it was the latest version of theAston Martin (in the novel Bond drove a DB Mark III, which he considered England's most sophisticated car).[51] The company was initially reluctant, but was finally convinced to make aproduct placement deal. In the script, the car was armed only with asmoke screen, but every crew member began suggesting gadgets to install in it: Hamilton conceived the revolving number plate because he had been getting many parking tickets, while his stepson suggested the ejector seat (which he saw on television).[52] A gadget near the lights that would drop sharp nails was replaced with an oil dispenser because the producers thought the original could be easily copied by viewers.[50] Adam and engineerJohn Stears overhauled the prototype of the Aston Martin DB5 coupe, installing these and other features into a car over six weeks.[7] The scene where the DB5 crashes was filmed twice, with the second take being used in the film. The first take, in which the car drives through the fake wall,[53] can be seen in the trailer.[8] Two of the gadgets were not installed in the car: the wheel-destroying spikes, inspired byBen-Hur'sscythed chariots, were entirely made in-studio; and the ejector seat used a seat thrown by compressed air, with a dummy sitting atop it.[54] Another car without the gadgets was created, which was eventually furnished for publicity purposes. It was reused forThunderball.[55]
Lasers did not exist in 1959 when the book was written, nor did high-power industrial lasers at the time the film was made, making them a novelty. In the novel, Goldfinger uses acircular saw to try to kill Bond, but the filmmakers changed it to a laser to make the film feel fresher.[33] Hamilton immediately thought of giving the laser a place in the film's story as Goldfinger's weapon of choice. Ken Adam was advised on the laser's design by twoHarvard scientists who helped design the water reactor inDr No.[49] The laser beam itself was an optical effect added in post-production. For close-ups where the flame cuts through metal, technician Bert Luxford heated the metal with ablowtorch from underneath the table to which Bond was strapped.[56]
The model jet used for wide shots of Goldfinger'sLockheed JetStar was painted differently on the right side to be used as the presidential plane that crashes at the film's end.[57] Several cars were provided by theFord Motor Company including aMustang that Tilly Masterson drives,[8] aFord Country Squire station wagon used to transport Bond from the airport to the stud ranch, aFord Thunderbird driven by Felix Leiter, and aLincoln Continental in which Oddjob kills Solo. The Continental had its engine removed before being placed in acar crusher, and the destroyed car had to be partially cut so that the bed of theFord Falcon Ranchero in which it was deposited could support the weight.[58]
The opening credit sequence was designed bygraphic artistRobert Brownjohn, featuring clips of all James Bond films thus far projected onMargaret Nolan's body. Its design was inspired by seeing light projecting on people's bodies as they got up and left a cinema.[59]
Shirley Eaton as the murdered Jill Masterson—"one of the most enduring images in cinematic history"[60]
Visually, the film uses many golden motifs, reflecting the novel's treatment of Goldfinger's obsession with the metal. All of Goldfinger's female henchwomen in the film except his private jet's co-pilot (black hair) and stewardess (who is Korean) are red-blonde, or blonde, including Pussy Galore and her Flying Circus crew (both the characters Tilly Masterson and Pussy specifically have black hair in the novel). Goldfinger has a yellow-painted Rolls-Royce with number plate "AU 1" (Au being the chemical symbol for gold), and also sports yellow or golden items or clothing in every film scene, including a golden pistol, when disguised as a colonel. Jill Masterson is famously killed by being painted with gold, which according to Bond causes her to die of "skin suffocation". (While this is an entirely fictional cause of death, the iconic scene caused much of the public to accept it as a medical fact;[61] an urban legend circulated that the scene was inspired by a Swiss model who accidentally died the same way while preparing for a photo shoot.[62]) Bond is bound to a cutting bench with a sheet of gold on it (as Goldfinger points out to him) before nearly being lasered. Goldfinger's factory henchmen in the film wear yellow sashes, Pussy Galore twice wears a metallic gold vest, and Pussy's pilots all wear yellow sunburst insignia on their uniforms. Goldfinger's Jetstar hostess, Mei-Lei, wears a golden bodice and gold-accented sarong.[63] The concept of the recurring gold theme running through the film was a design aspect conceived and executed by Ken Adam and art directorPeter Murton.[18]
Since the release date for the film had been pre-determined and filming had finished close to that date,John Barry scored some sequences to rough, non-final versions of the sequences.[64] Barry described his work inGoldfinger as a favourite of his, saying it was "the first time I had complete control, writing the score and the song".[65] The musical tracks, in keeping with the film's theme of gold and metal, make heavy use of brass, and also metallic chimes. The film's score is described as "brassy and raunchy" with "a sassy sexiness to it".[36]
Goldfinger began the tradition of Bond theme songs introduced over the openingtitle sequence, the style of the song from the pop genre and using popular artists.[57] (Although the title song, sung byMatt Monro, inFrom Russia with Love was introduced in a few phrases on Bond's first appearance, a full rendition on the soundtrack only commenced for the final scene on the waters atVenice and through the followingend titles.)Shirley Bassey established theopening title tradition giving her distinguished style to "Goldfinger", and would sing the theme songs for two future Bond films,Diamonds are Forever andMoonraker. The songGoldfinger was composed by John Barry, with lyrics byAnthony Newley andLeslie Bricusse. The track features a youngJimmy Page andJohn Paul Jones, who were doing many sessions at the time. The lyrics were described in one contemporary newspaper as "puerile",[66] but what remained undisturbed was the Shirley Bassey interpretation world impact. Like the score, the arrangement makes heavy use of brass, meeting well Miss Bassey's signaturebelting, and incorporates the Bond theme fromDr. No. Newley recorded the early versions, which were even considered for inclusion in the film. Thesoundtrack album topped theBillboard 200 chart,[67] and reached 14th place in theUK Albums Chart.[68] The single for "Goldfinger" was also successful, reaching 8th in theBillboard Hot 100[69] and 21st in theUK charts.[70]
Goldfinger premiered at theOdeon Leicester Square in London on 17 September 1964, with general release in the United Kingdom the following day. Leicester Square was packed with sightseers and fans and police were unable to control the crowd. A set of glass doors to the cinema was accidentally broken and the premiere was shown ten minutes late because of the confusion.[71] The United States premiere occurred on 21 December 1964, at theDeMille Theatre in New York.[72] The film opened in 64 cinemas across 41 cities[9] and eventually peaked at 485 screens.[73]Goldfinger was temporarily banned inIsrael because of Gert Fröbe's connections with theNazi Party.[74] The ban, however, was lifted after several months when a Jewish family publicly thanked Fröbe for protecting them from persecution duringWorld War II.[8][75]
1964 Aston Martin DB5, produced by Corgi Toys as a tie-in to the film
The film'smarketing campaign began as soon as filming started in Florida, with Eon allowing photographers to enter the set to take pictures of Shirley Eaton painted in gold. Robert Brownjohn, who designed the opening credits, was responsible for the posters for the advertising campaign, which also used actress Margaret Nolan.[7] To promote the film, the twoAston Martin DB5s were showcased at the1964 New York World's Fair and it was dubbed "the most famous car in the world";[76] consequently, sales of the car rose.[52]Corgi Toys began its decades-long relationship with the Bond franchise, producing a toy of the car, which became the biggest selling toy of 1964.[11] The film's success also led to licensedtie-in clothing,dress shoes,action figures,board games,jigsaw puzzles,lunch boxes, toys, record albums,trading cards andslot cars.[9]
Derek Prouse ofThe Sunday Times said ofGoldfinger that it was "superbly engineered. It is fast, it is most entertainingly preposterous and it is exciting."[77]
The reviewer fromThe Times said "All the devices are infinitely sophisticated, and so is the film: the tradition of self-mockery continues, though at times it over-reaches itself", also saying that "It is the mixture as before, only more so: it is superb hokum."[78] Connery's acting efforts were overlooked by this reviewer, who did say: "There is some excellent bit-part playing by Mr. Bernard Lee and Mr. Harold Sakata: Mr. Gert Fröbe is astonishingly well cast in the difficult part of Goldfinger."[78]Donald Zec, writing for theDaily Mirror, said of the film that "Ken Adam's set designs are brilliant; the direction of Guy Hamilton tautly exciting; Connery is better than ever, and the titles superimposed on the gleaming body of the girl in gold are inspired."[79]
Penelope Gilliatt, writing inThe Observer, said that the film had "a spoofing callousness" and that it was "absurd, funny and vile".[80]The Guardian said thatGoldfinger was "two hours of unmissable fantasy", also saying that the film was "the most exciting, the most extravagant of the Bond films: garbage from the gods", adding that Connery was "better than ever as Bond".[81]Alan Dent, writing forThe Illustrated London News, thoughtGoldfinger "even tenser, louder, wittier, more ingenious and more impossible than'From Russia with Love'... [a] brilliant farrago", adding that Connery "is ineffable".[82]
Philip Oakes ofThe Sunday Telegraph said that the film was "dazzling in its technical ingenuity",[83] whileTime said that "this picture is a thriller exuberantly travestied."[84]Bosley Crowther, writing inThe New York Times, was less enthusiastic about the film, saying that it was "tediously apparent" that Bond was becoming increasingly reliant on gadgets with less emphasis on "the lush temptations of voluptuous females", although he did admit that "Connery plays the hero with an insultingly cool, commanding air."[85] He saved his praises for other actors in the film, saying that "Gert Fröbe is aptly fat and feral as the villainous financier, and Honor Blackman is forbiddingly frigid and flashy as the latter's aeronautical accomplice."[85]
InGuide for the Film Fanatic,Danny Peary wrote thatGoldfinger is "the best of the James Bond films starring Sean Connery ... There's lots of humor, gimmicks, excitement, an amusing yet tense golf contest between Bond and Goldfinger, thrilling fights to the death between Bond and Oddjob and Bond and Goldfinger, and a fascinating central crime ... Most enjoyable, but too bad Eaton's part isn't longer and that Fröbe's Goldfinger, a heavy but nimble intellectual in theSydney Greenstreet tradition, never appeared in another Bond film."[86]Roger Ebert of theChicago Sun-Times declared this to be his favourite Bond film and later added it to his "Great Movies" list.[87]
The film review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes gives a 99% rating and an average score of 8.7/10 based on 74 reviews. The website's consensus reads, "Goldfinger is where James Bond as we know him comes into focus – it features one of 007's most famous lines ('A martini. Shaken, not stirred') and a wide range of gadgets that would become the series' trademark".[88]Goldfinger is the highest-rated Bond film on the site.[89]
In 2024, Far Out Magazine named Sean Connery's James Bond one of the "10 most accurate moviepsychopaths according to theFBI".[90]
Goldfinger's $3 million budget was recouped in two weeks, and it broke box office records around the world.[9] Demand for the film was so high that the DeMille cinema in New York City had to stay open twenty-four hours a day.[91] TheGuinness Book of World Records went on to listGoldfinger as the fastest grossing film of all time with a gross of $10.3 million in 14 weeks in the United States.[9][92] The film closed its original box office run with $23 million in the United States[73] and $46 million worldwide.[93] After reissues, the first being adouble feature withDr. No in 1966,[94]Goldfinger grossed a total of $51,081,062 in the United States[95] and $73,800,000 elsewhere, for a total worldwide gross of $124,900,000.[96]
The film distributorPark Circus re-releasedGoldfinger in the UK on 27 July 2007 at 150 multiplex cinemas, on digital prints.[97][98] The re-release put the film twelfth at the weekly box office.[99]Goldfinger again received a re-release in November 2020 in the wake of Connery's death.[100]
Goldfinger was the first James Bond movie to premiere on theABC Television Network in the United States, which would go on to have a nearly two decade relationship with the film series. The initial September 17, 1972 airing ofGoldfinger onThe ABC Sunday Night Movie garnered aNielsen Media Research household television rating of 34.0 and a share of 52, ranking number two for the week behind onlyMarcus Welby, M.D. airing on the same network.[101] The premiere was sponsored byChevrolet and included several of its new models for 1973, even though the movie itself featured several cars from theFord Motor Company.[102]
Goldfinger was first issued as a home video release in May 1981[118] alongside 10 other Bond titles, for RCA's short-livedCapacitance Electronic Disc. It would receive a much wider release onVHS in June[119] of 1982. Further releases on formats such asBetamax andLaserDisc ensued throughout the 1980s, before a remastered edition was issued on VHS and LaserDisc in July 1992, the latter as part of theCriterion Collection.
The film was released in 1994 in the US and Europe onVideo CD.[120] It was first released on DVD in the US in 1997 byMGM Home Entertainment and in Europe in 2000. 2006 saw the release of the 'Ultimate Edition' DVD, whose video was sourced from a newly scanned 4K master of the original film.[121] In 2008,Goldfinger was made available on Blu-ray Disc.[122]In 2025,Goldfinger was released on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray as part of the 'James Bond: Sean Connery 6-Film Collection' box-set.
Goldfinger's script became a template for subsequent Bond films.[41] It was the first of the series showing Bond relying heavily on technology,[76] as well as the first to show a pre-credits sequence with only a tangential link to the main story[25]—in this case allowing Bond to get to Miami after a mission. Also introduced for the first of many appearances is the briefing in Q-branch, allowing the viewer to see the gadgets in development.[123] The subsequent films in the Bond series follow most ofGoldfinger's basic structure, featuring a henchman with a particular characteristic, a Bond girl who is killed by the villain, big emphasis on the gadgets and a moretongue-in-cheek approach, though trying to balance action and comedy.[124][125][126][127]
Goldfinger represents the peak of the series. It is the most perfectly realised of all the films with hardly a wrong step made throughout its length. It moves at a fast and furious pace, but the plot holds together logically enough (more logically than the book) and is a perfect blend of the real and the fantastic.
Goldfinger has been described as perhaps "the most highly and consistently praised Bond picture of them all"[129] and afterGoldfinger, Bond "became a true phenomenon."[11] The success of the film led to the emergence of many other works in the espionage genre andparodies of James Bond, such asthe Beatles filmHelp! in 1965[130] and a spoof of Ian Fleming'sfirst Bond novel,Casino Royale, in 1967.[131] Indeed, it has been said thatGoldfinger was the cause of the boom in espionage films in the 1960s,[128] so much so that in "1966, moviegoers were offered no less than 22 examples of secret agent entertainment, including several blatant attempts to begin competing series, withJames Coburn starring as Derek Flint in the filmOur Man Flint andDean Martin asMatt Helm".[132]
Even within the Bond canon,Goldfinger is acknowledged; the 22nd Bond film,Quantum of Solace, includes an homage to the gold body paint death scene by having a female character dead on a bed nude, covered in crude oil.[133] The DB 5 became perhaps the most iconic Bond vehicle, used again in Thunderball and brought back again multiple times in both the Brosnan and Craig films. Outside the Bond films, elements ofGoldfinger, such as Oddjob and his use of his hat as a weapon, Bond removing his drysuit to reveal a tuxedo underneath, and the laser scene have been homaged or spoofed in works such asTrue Lies,[134]The Simpsons,[135] and theAustin Powers series.[136] The US television programmeMythBusters explored many scenarios seen in the film, such as the explosive depressurisation in a plane at high altitudes,[137] the death by full body painting,[138] an ejector seat in a car[139] and using a tuxedo under a drysuit.[140]
The success of the film led to Ian Fleming's Bond novels receiving an increase of popularity[9] and nearly 6 million books were sold in the United Kingdom in 1964, including 964,000 copies ofGoldfinger alone.[67] Between 1962 and 1967 a total of 22,792,000 Bond novels were sold.[141]
The 2012 video game007 Legends features a level based onGoldfinger.[142]
^Jenkins, Tricia (September 2005). "James Bond's "Pussy" and Anglo-American Cold War Sexuality".The Journal of American Culture.28 (3):309–317.doi:10.1111/j.1542-734X.2005.00215.x.
^abField, Matthew (2015).Some kind of hero : 007 : the remarkable story of the James Bond films. Ajay Chowdhury. Stroud, Gloucestershire.ISBN978-0-7509-6421-0.OCLC930556527.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Cork & Scivally 2006, p. 79. "On Christmas Eve, the DeMille officially opened for 24 hours straight and did not close again until after New Year's Day"
^Moniot, Drew (Summer 1976). "James Bond and America in the Sixties: An Investigation of the Formula Film in Popular Culture".Journal of the University Film Association.28 (3):25–33.JSTOR20687331.