RE: Wolf of Wall Street Countach to be sold at auction

RE: Wolf of Wall Street Countach to be sold at auction

Yesterday

Wolf of Wall Street Countach to be sold at auction

DiCaprio-driven Lambo needs no introduction among film fans - which accounts for the seven-figure estimate


Lamborghini is no stranger to cinematic fame. Not so long ago, we reported that the black Countach LP400S featured heavily in 1981’s The Cannonball Run had been included on the National Historic Vehicle Register - meaning it was considered a vehicle of ‘national importance’ in the US. And while we’d argue that the identity of its come-hither drivers in the movie (Tara Buckman and Adrienne Barbeau, obvs) were partly responsible for making the car’s appearance so memorable, who are we to argue with Congress? That Lambo is now right up there with the first Indy 500 winner and the 15-millionth Model T. 

Then, of course, there’s the immortal opening sequence of The Italian Job, where a Miura P400S calves up an Alp for four, uninterrupted minutes (before being interrupted by a tunnel). Or the lightly body-kitted Huracan carving up a cliff-top road at the soon-to-be-ruined hands of Dr Strange (before being interrupted by a CGI accident). Or the Murcielago LP640 driven by Bruce Wayne in The Dark Knight, where one of the three (real) cars sent by the factory was T-boned (for real) in a rare bit of non-Batman heroism. And then sold to a movie memorabilia collector afterwards. 

Which brings us neatly onto this, the US-spec, Bianco Polo-coloured Countach 25th Anniversary made very famous indeed by the Lemmon 714-sequence in the Wolf of Wall Street. We won’t retread the entire scene, but suffice it to say that Leonardo DiCaprio’s character has to get from his country club to his house in a hurry while heavily (and hilariously) under the influence of a notoriously strong brand of Quaaludes. He manages this, but only to the detriment (we discover later) of the bodywork of his limited-edition Lamborghini. 

Incredibly, and somewhat ironically, the story is true except for the Countach (it was actually a convertible Mercedes that Jordan Belfort totalled driving home) but what better car to drop in as the embodiment of ‘80s-era excess than the white-on-white, bedroom poster-special? Especially when a) there are scissor doors for DiCaprio to negotiate when he can’t stand up, and b) there’s always something particularly corruptive about seeing the straight edges of a Countach creased by fate. 

It is that latter effect - created by actually crashing chassis no. ZA9CA05A6KLA12692 - into several cars and a flatbed truck, that is expected to strike a chord with buyers. Aside from a backup Countach (rented by the production, and only seen very briefly on camera) this is the only model that featured in the film, and, according to Bonhams, is ‘preserved in as-filmed condition [and is] a time capsule of the era's extravagant debauchery’. So it’s about as one-of-a-kind as you could hope to get. 

Doubtless it is this aspect, together with the film’s reputation as one of Martin Scorsese’s most entertaining efforts and DiCaprio’s involvement, which has set the auction estimate at an eye-popping $1.5 to $2m (so up to 1.5 million quid). Arguably a snip in terms of high-end movie memorabilia - the Aston Martin DB5 used to promote Thunderball famously achieved £5.2m when it was auctioned off back in 2019 - but still a remarkable amount of money for a display-only Countach. Oh and a Jordan Belfort costume, a signed director's chair and a clapboard, two crew hoodies, and two DVDs of the film, which are included in the same lot. If you’re interested, it all goes under the hammer at Bonhams’ Abu Dhabi auction this Saturday. 


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Author
Discussion

fantheman80

Original Poster:

1,206 posts

44 months

Yesterday (14:23)
quotequote all
with such a budget couldn't they have built a model or have fked up a MR2 kit car version, not the real thing

Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....

TinpotTintop

62 posts

26 months

Yesterday (14:25)
quotequote all
Miura...calves up an Alp...


WPA

7,120 posts

109 months

Yesterday (14:32)
quotequote all
Shame they used a real car.

Auction link: https://cars.bonhams.com/auction/28793/lot/34P/198...

Cold

15,044 posts

85 months

Yesterday (14:38)
quotequote all
TinpotTintop said:
Miura...calves up an Alp...
There's a bull joke in there somewhere.

Deranged Rover

2,999 posts

69 months

Yesterday (14:41)
quotequote all
fantheman80 said:
Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....
I've still never been able to forgive Tomorrow Never Dies for blowing up a nice burgundy Senator.

MF35

379 posts

16 months

Yesterday (14:48)
quotequote all
TinpotTintop said:
Miura...calves up an Alp...
They all do that, sir : )

ex-devonpaul

1,077 posts

132 months

Yesterday (14:58)
quotequote all
So Schmee crashes a Senna and ruins its value, DiCaprio crashes a lambo and quadruples it.

LotusOmega375D

7,321 posts

148 months

Yesterday (15:25)
quotequote all
Fancy keeping hold of that wreck for 10 years after filming and not doing anything with it until now. Maybe it was abandoned in the studio car park?

CKY

1,053 posts

10 months

Yesterday (15:35)
quotequote all
ex-devonpaul said:
So Schmee crashes a Senna...
Christ I forgot about that - never seen anyone so frightened and shocked about getting a dink on their car rofl Think that was the last time I clicked on any of his crap tbf so he might have outdone himself since.

PistonTim

458 posts

134 months

Yesterday (16:14)
quotequote all
It's a loooong way from the same league as the thunderball DB5 though, and you can actually drive that one.

I'm sure it'll sell to some crazy american but to me this is (literally) junk surely?

B10

1,198 posts

262 months

Yesterday (16:54)
quotequote all
Deranged Rover said:
fantheman80 said:
Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....
I've still never been able to forgive Tomorrow Never Dies for blowing up a nice burgundy Senator.
I got grumpy when they dropped pianos on Marinas. A waste of a piano......and a Marina

fantheman80

Original Poster:

1,206 posts

44 months

Yesterday (17:02)
quotequote all
fantheman80 said:
with such a budget couldn't they have built a model or have fked up a MR2 kit car version, not the real thing

Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....
And would you look at that...the 106 Rallye suddenly appears on PH home page hehe

Edited by fantheman80 on Tuesday 21st November 17:07

whiteonyx

366 posts

210 months

Yesterday (17:08)
quotequote all
So you purchase this wreck for stupid money and then do what with it??????????????

Robertb

960 posts

233 months

Yesterday (17:17)
quotequote all
It was a good film but not, I suspect, one that will stand the test of time like Italian Job etc.

I cannot imagine what you'd do with a mangled Countach. I suppose its an interesting piece of installation art.

Or get it off to Tyrell's Classic Garage for a rebuild.

Robertb

960 posts

233 months

Yesterday (17:21)
quotequote all
B10 said:
Deranged Rover said:
fantheman80 said:
Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....
I've still never been able to forgive Tomorrow Never Dies for blowing up a nice burgundy Senator.
I got grumpy when they dropped pianos on Marinas. A waste of a piano......and a Marina
Or that time when Clarkson destroyed a 1969 911...

It would be an interesting thread; What is the most valuable thing destroyed in a film?

Howard1650

291 posts

186 months

Yesterday (17:22)
quotequote all
whiteonyx said:
So you purchase this wreck for stupid money and then do what with it??????????????
I’m sure there will be some wealthy commodity brokers or venture capitalists that will think nothing of this kind of money and buy it just to add to their collection. Unfortunately in the world we live in what is expensive for some is just loose change for others.

IMI A

9,260 posts

196 months

Yesterday (17:47)
quotequote all
if that makes 7 figs world has gone mad. £60k max and thats if you're a bodyshop with a jig.

Dave.

7,226 posts

248 months

Yesterday (18:14)
quotequote all
fantheman80 said:
with such a budget couldn't they have built a model or have fked up a MR2 kit car version, not the real thing

Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....
nerd They insisted on it being a real one as a fake/kit etc wouldn’t have crumpled/deformed in the same way. Apparently.

Gemaeden

286 posts

110 months

Yesterday (18:32)
quotequote all
Robertb said:
B10 said:
Deranged Rover said:
fantheman80 said:
Then again I got the hump when they smashed up a 106 rallye and the Focus RS mk1 on Topgear....
I've still never been able to forgive Tomorrow Never Dies for blowing up a nice burgundy Senator.
I got grumpy when they dropped pianos on Marinas. A waste of a piano......and a Marina
Or that time when Clarkson destroyed a 1969 911...

It would be an interesting thread; What is the most valuable thing destroyed in a film?
The World Trade Center?

520TORQUES

2,542 posts

10 months

Yesterday (18:39)
quotequote all
It is the stest looking Countach they made, the 25th anniversary cars are gopping.

Cars associated with films often make stupid money, simply for their value to the film geek and investor world, they is no logic to the value if you consider it a car.