AG百家乐在线官网

James Bond: Oddjob's lethal steel-rimmed hat from Goldfinger valued at 拢30,000

Hitman Oddjob famously used the steel-rimmed bowler to kill in 1964 film Goldfinger, Sean Connery's third outing as James Bond.

Gert Fr枚be and Harold Sakata as Goldfinger and Oddjob in James Bond film Goldfinger (1964)
Image: Gert Frobe and Harold Sakata as Bond villains Goldfinger and Oddjob in Goldfinger (1964)
Why you can trust Sky News

The steel-rimmed hat famously worn by hitman Oddjob in Goldfinger has been valued at up to 拢30,000.

Now minus the famous metal rim, the headwear from the James Bond film was valued on the Antiques Roadshow.

Undated BBC handout photo of a battered bowler hat from 007 film Goldfinger that was valued at up to 拢30,000 on the Antiques Roadshow. The steel-rimmed hat and weapon belonged to hitman Oddjob (Harold Sakata) in the 1964 film.
Image: The bowler hat has been valued at up to 拢30,000

It belonged to assassin Oddjob, played by Harold Sakata in the 1964 film, which starred Sean Connery as 007, Gert Frobe as the titular villain and Honor Blackman as Pussy Galore.

It is widely considered as one of the greatest of the 24 Bond films released since the first, Dr No, in 1962.

The owner of the hat said he was a big 007 fan as a child and his brother-in-law, who was a driver for Aston Martin during the filming of Goldfinger, asked Pinewood Studios if they had any memorabilia.

The studio gave him Oddjob's bowler hat, but removed the metal rim.

"As a young lad, everybody wanted to throw the Oddjob hat, and if you look at it, everybody did throw the hat because it's absolutely in pieces because it didn't have the steel in it anymore, so therefore whenever it landed it damaged it," the owner said.

More on James Bond

The Bond item was part of a collection of 007 memorabilia brought to Antiques Roadshow when it filmed at the National Botanic Garden of Wales last summer.

Last month, five deactivated guns used in Bond films, estimated to be worth more than £100,000, were stolen from a property in north London.

:: Listen to the Backstage podcast on , , ,

They included Beretta "Cheetah" and Beretta "Tomcat" pistols and a Llama 22 calibre handgun from Die Another Day, the Walther PPK handgun used in A View to a Kill, and a Revolver Smith and Wesson 44 Magnum featured in Live and Let Die.

The release date for new Bond film No Time To Die has been pushed back seven months due to coronavirus.