Museum of Science and Industry offers a behind-the-scenes look at James Bond’s tech

A model of the underwater Lotus Esprit from the James Bond film “The Spy Who Loved Me,” which starred Roger Moore. The car and other items from the Bond film franchise will be on exhibit in “007 Science: Inventing the World of James Bond” at the Museum of Science and Industry through October.

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

James Bond’s iconic Aston Martin DBS and other gadgets have arrived at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry for a first-of-its-kind exhibit on the science behind the film franchise.

For veteran special effects supervisor Chris Corbould — who has worked on 15 James Bond films — moving through the new exhibit is like a walk down memory lane.

But Corbould hopes those viewing the props for the very first time walk away with a yearning and excitement to build new things.

A gun from the Bond film “The Man With the Golden Gun.”

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

“I think it would be great if they came away with a passion for doing something like this,” Corbould told the Sun-Times during a preview event Wednesday.

“There’ve been many James Bond exhibitions, but this is the first one where we’ve looked into the science of James Bond and how it affected future inventions and discoveries. Some of these things are coming out of somebody’s head, and to us now they are everyday items.”

“007 Science: Inventing the World of James Bond,” opens to the public Thursday and will run through late October. The exhibit features 13 vehicles and over 90 additional artifacts from the Bond films.

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The creations of the Bond films always had a grounding in science, according to MSI head curator Kathleen McCarthy, and the movies often debuted technology that would late materialize in real life, such as underwater cameras and watches with TV screens.

The iconic Aston Martin DB5 first driven by Sean Connery’s James Bond in “Goldfinger.”

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

Dozens of the real vehicles used in stunts are in the exhibit, including the Aston Martin DBS from “Casino Royale” (2006), which set a new Guinness World Record for most barrel rolls in a car.

Crews first attempted to use a ramp to get the vehicle to flip, but the Aston Martin proved too sturdy, so Corbould said he and his team fitted the car with a cannon of pressurized nitrogen to propel it to flip.

Interactive features throughout the exhibit will also allow visitors to step into lab space of Bond tech whiz “Q” to try and design their own stunts or gadgets.

“Everything was set up to not only tell you how it happened [in the film] but to inspire you to then be creative,” McCarthy said.

To emphasize Bond’s impact on real-world innovation, the end of the exhibit features a collection of Bond props with their modern-day counterparts — the jetpack used in “Thunderball” (1965) next to a modern-day Gravity Industries Jet Suit and the suction cup climbers from “You Only Live Twice” (1967) alongside real life Gecko Gloves.

Likewise, the stunts of Bond films, aimed to adhere to real-world laws of physics and mathematics.

“James Bond is always based in reality,” Corbould told the Sun-Times.

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More details on exhibit hours and prices can be found on the Museum of Science and Industry website.

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