Or how about the jet pack Bond used in Thunderball. That's real, too.

James Bond Gadgets In the unofficial Bond film, Never Say Never Again, Alec McCowen plays Q otherwise known as Algy or Algernon. Something I wish I had, personally, was a ballpoint pen that you could convert to a timed grenade by clicking it three times. The Bond films were the first films to embrace technology. Again, not a real impressive device, but quite useful. This is a holdover from Fleming's novels, in which Bond is described as having a similar watch. The gun takes one bullet, made from gold and inscribed with the name of the intended target.

In Moonraker, Bond was given a snazzy twenty-odd foot motorboat which featured rear-firing torpedoes, a mine dropper, and a built-in emergency escape hang glider. There was also an underwater mobile unit containing two oxygen tanks, a propulsion unit, CO2 spear guns, and a light. Omega SeamasterNow Bond's watch of choice, the Omega Seamaster. Although it really is a Rolls-Royce, its bodywork is made of pure gold.

Later recovered by Bond, who at the end destroys it to prevent it from falling into enemy hands. Take the famous underwater breather, barely fountain pen-sized, that Sean Connery pulled out in Thunderball in 1965 and breathed through for about four minutes. Tank Buster-Used by general moon's son in the pre credit sequence to destroy Bond's helicopter. Back then, technology was seen as sinister in many films, Cork said. That gets pretty hard when Bond films are there to show the way.

In the only scene in which he appears, he replaces Bond's Beretta . Mexican Machine gun seen tested in MI6 monastery. Used by Bond to escape his captors after Boris nervously clicks it. You get surprised while in sniper mode and the villain takes the rifle, and then decides that in the heat of hand-to-hand combat, he'll use a long rifle against you in its intended manner of use. Or how about the jet pack Bond used in Thunderball? That's real, too.