A replica of the Aston Martin DB5, which was used for the James Bond

No Time To Die

stunts

,

sold for nearly three million pounds at auction on Wednesday, during a charity sale which raised more than six million pounds.

A grand total of £6,103,500 was raised in this evening's Sixty Years of Bond live charity auction.



That's all for tonight!

Don't forget – you can still place your bids on the lots featured in the online auction until October 5. https://t.co/lq4z3vcfyz #60yearsofBond pic.twitter.com/VKCMJixqsu

— James Bond (@007) September 28, 2022

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The fruits of this sale, organized by Christie's to celebrate sixty years of James Bond in the cinema, reached 6,103,500 pounds sterling (6,827,000 euros) for 25 lots, according to the official Twitter account James Bond@007.

The funds collected are intended for 45 associations, including the foundation of Prince Charles (before he became king with the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8) or Doctors Without Borders.

Many accessories from the saga

Sold for 2.922 million pounds sterling (3.26 million euros), the replica of the DB5, emblematic model of 007, is one of eight copies specially designed and manufactured for the filming of the feature film made in 2021 and the only stunt car to date offered for sale by Aston Martin and EON productions, according to Christie's.

Another Aston Martin, a V8 model from the early 1980s also appearing in

Dying Can Wait

, was sold for 630,000 pounds (over 700,000 euros), a third, a recent DBS Superleggera, for 403,000 pounds (over 450,000 euros).

Other items on sale also included costumes and accessories related to the famous saga.

At the same time, 36 other lots were auctioned online from September 15 to October 5.

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