The movie's biggest bangs were three explosions detonated at the same time and seen in the film at the end of the picture. They were specifically designed to imitate the kind of explosion that missiles from a Royal Navy warship would produce. These types of blasts are know as bunker-buster bombs. The explosions were detonated and filmed by the movie's second unit at Britain's Ministry of Defence's Military Training Area at Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, England. In the movie, the big bangs are seen at the end exploding on Safin's lair with the explosion footage being digitally composited onto the plates shot at the Faroe Islands which portrayed Safin's Island. Near the explosion site resides Hankley Common which was used for filming Bond's home estate and lodge in 'Skyfall' (2012). That earlier Bond movie's director Sam Mendes later used Salisbury Plain for battle scenes in '1917' (2019). For 'No Time to Die' (2021), 135.4 kg of explosives were set off for the three-in-one shot explosions with the production hoping to get the blasts into the Guinness Book of World Records. In the previous Bond movie 'Spectre' (2015), also directed by Sam Mendes, the massive explosion seen in the latter part of the film at the meteorite crater base was awarded a Guinness World Record as the largest movie stunt explosion of all time.
Scritto da il 05-03-2025 alle ore 07:11

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