The Geneva Motor Show this year was characterized by what might as well have been alien life forms. There wasn't much room to navigate between the $2 million electric cars in carbon fiber exoskeletons and $3 million jet-propelled bugs designed to break 300 mph. But those who paid attention to more mundane matters were rewarded by a stylish Brit sitting quietly in the center of it all-"mundane" being a relative term.
The $685,000 Speedback GTs on display from David Brown Automotive are hand-built odes to times past. Open their doors, elegant and long like a woman's glove, and encounter such sundry pleasures as burled-walnut steering wheels, tartan interiors, hand-braided saddle-leather accents, picnic sets of enamel crockery, and silver plated tools ingeniously folded into hatchback trunks.
The ruby-red Speedback GT sitting at the center of the display was a dead ringer for a Jaguar Jane Birkin would have driven-at least, from the front. From the back, it looked like a svelte Aston Martin.
You could be forgiven for guessing it's a remake of either. The cars are built using an original chassis, transmission, and suspension from a Jaguar XKR-that's the one featured in Die Another Day-with a custom-built aluminum body styled to look like an Aston Martin DB5. That's the one 007 drove in Goldfinger.
David Brown, the eponymous founder of the Silverstone, England-based manufacturer, started selling them in 2014 after finishing a vintage motor car rally of his own and facing disappointment with the performance and reliability of the Ferrari Daytona he borrowed for the occasion. (By coincidence, a different David Brown owned Aston Martin and was the namesake for the "DB" nomenclature of its cars-DB5, DB9, etc. That DB died in 1993.)