Ford Mustang "Eleanor" 1967, Estados Unidos
Fotografia
HIGHLIGHTS
One of the
original 11 cars built for use in Touchstone Pictures' 2000 film "Gone in
60 Seconds" by Cinema Vehicle Services in North Hollywood, California
According the
the studio set car list, this car is labeled "The Dream Car"
Dream car
featured in various interior and exterior film scene from the Shipyard, City
and River chase scenes
Recent
rotisserie restoration by Cinema Vehicle Services with approximately 90 miles
since completion
Blueprinted
HiPo 351 CI V-8 engine
MSD ignition
system
Aluminum
heads, roller camshaft
Edelbrock
Performer intake
Headers and
stainless side-exit exhaust with Magnaflow mufflers
Aluminum
radiator with electric fan
Tremec TKO
5-speed manual transmission
Hydraulic
clutch, PIAA lights
Quicktime
bellhousing, Wenco driveshaft
3.70
Positraction differential
Power
steering, Wilwood disc brakes
Total Control
Products suspension
Pepper Gray
Metallic with Black stripes
NOS system,
120-125 additional HP
Hurst shifter
with Iconic "Go Baby Go" button
Auto Meter
Sport Comp 10,000 RPM column-mounted tachometer
LeCarra
wood-rimmed steering wheel
TCP aluminum
pedal covers
Trunk-mounted
fuel cell
Custom
10-spoke wheels with spinner hubs
In 1995, the
idea began circulating about remaking H.B. "Toby" Halicki's legendary
1974 film, “Gone in 60 Seconds,” but polishing it up and heightening the
experience. Enlisting Touchstone Pictures and Jerry Bruckheimer, Halicki’s
widow, Denise, entered into a licensing agreement to produce the remake with
Denise acting as the executive producer. Filming began in 1999 and “Gone in 60
Seconds” premiered on June 9, 2000, with an all-star cast including Nicolas
Cage, Angelina Jolie, Robert Duvall and Will Patton among many other gifted
actors blending with edgy cinematography, spectacular stunt work, a tremendous
musical score and a revised story from the original with a lot of heart wrapped
in tough packaging.
Like the
original, the film depicts a band of car thieves led by Memphis Raines (Cage)
out to score an impossible heist of 50 cars in just several hours. As in the
original, for identification purposes, each car was given a lady’s name to keep
the cars under the radar while the crew communicated on radios with
transmissions that could be heard by others, including police.
The movie was
packed with an array of stunning and stellar cars, but it was a 1967 Ford
Mustang GT500 in Pepper Gray Metallic with black stripes riding on
Halibrand-style wheels with a host of subtle and not-so-subtle enhancements
that would become the hero car and an instant dream car—this was Eleanor.
Sketched by Steve Stanford, Eleanor’s design was refined and crafted by Chip
Foose, who implemented what he thought Carroll Shelby would want to see as a
modern day GT500. It’s rumored Bruckheimer wanted Eleanor to be black with gray
stripes and that a painter mixed up the order, creating the gray with black
stripe motif that became so famous.
Cinema Vehicle
Services in North Hollywood, California, was brought in to build 11 cars for
production, and according to the studio car list, this Eleanor is labeled as
“The Dream Car.” Used for a number of interior and exterior sequences including
the chase scenes through the shipyard, city and along the Los Angeles River,
this is the car that made Eleanor a household name, rocketing her into the
imaginations of car guys all over the world. This is the car that outran a
helicopter. This is the car that rocked the theater sound system with her
ferocious exhaust. This is the car that Memphis Raines is scared of. She even
has the famous Hurst shifter with the “Go-Baby-Go” button and daringly
beautiful 18-rivet French-made Lecarra wood-rimmed steering wheel.
Cinema Vehicle
Services recently performed a full rotisserie restoration on Eleanor and has
cruised with her for approximately 90 miles since the completion. Powered by a
blueprinted HiPo 351 CI V-8 engine topped with aluminum heads and an Edelbrock
Performer intake manifold, a roller camshaft, headers with stainless side-exit
exhaust with Magnaflow mufflers, and an MSD ignition system are just part of
the powertrain make up. A Tremec TKO 5-speed manual transmission and a
hydraulic clutch with Quicktime bellhousing and a Wenco driveshaft delivers
power to the 3.70 Positraction differential, while power steering and Wilwood
disc brakes along with a Total Control Products suspension all conspire to make
this car a truly riveting ride. But, the NOS system, which lends the engine an
additional 100 to 125 HP, takes it over the top, just as anyone would expect
from Eleanor. Keeping things in check include an aluminum radiator with
electric fan, an Auto Meter Sport Comp 10,000 RPM column-mounted tachometer and
hefty racing-style lap belts that nod back to the glory days of racing.
All things
told, Eleanor is one that can not only run with the best of them, but also be
somewhat docile and easy to use in traffic. Unlike her on-screen persona, she’s
a pretty nice gal to hang with. A trunk-mounted fuel cell, PIAA lights, TCP
aluminum pedal covers and infamous custom 10-spoke spinner wheels round out the
package, the most beautiful part of which is that this is not just another
look-alike Eleanor—this is the real deal of real deals. It really doesn’t get
much better than this.














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