Remembering the Man Behind the Iconic Sets of 007

See the sketches that birthed the legendary sets from Bond and Kubrick films alike.

Ken-Adam-Gear-Patrol-Lead-Full Andreas-Michael Velten

Legendary production designer Ken Adam died Thursday, March 10th, at the age of 95. Known for his Academy Award-winning work on films like The Madness of King George and Kubrickโ€™s Barry Lyndon, the designer also served as a lynchpin in seven James Bond films during the โ€˜60s and โ€˜70s. His characteristically vastย and futuristic designs can be seen in this collection of some of his sketches for his Bond and Kubrick sets.

Born in Berlin in 1921, Adam spent many of his formative years in London where he studied architecture and eventually servedย as a pilot for the Royal Air Force in World War II. It was after the war that Adam took up art directing for the big screen.

Whereas most movie sets of the time utilized small-scale, flimsy backdrops and architecture, Adam famously took a skyโ€™s-the-limit approach. โ€œReally my first thought was, letโ€™s forget the old way of making sets with wood paper and that sort of thing, and try making them for real,โ€ said Adam in the documentary short Designing Bondโ€™s World.ย Hisย full-scale, full-substanceย set design can be seenย in the experimental geometry and depth of his Bond lairs (the Fort Knox set in Goldfinger and the volcano set in You Only Live Twice) as well as his war room for Kubrickโ€™s Dr. Strangelove. โ€œOnce I began to understand the directorโ€™s concept, I started experimenting, not for the sake of it, but when I felt I could add something and then came up with a slightly different concept that I would then discuss with the director, โ€ said Adam in a conversation with his biographer Christopher Frayling. โ€œI sometimes think I was slightly crazy. I think I was unbelievably courageous to do things like the volcano in You Only Live Twice and what not, but I also think there must have been a slight element of madness.โ€ Adamโ€™s experimental ifย slightly unhinged touch could also be seen in some of Bondโ€™s distinctive gadgetry, including the Aston Martin in Goldfinger. โ€œThe ejector seat was an idea that came from my days as a pilot,โ€ Adam told the Los Angeles Times in 2015.

But the towering scale of Adamโ€™s sets didnโ€™t overshadow his eye for meticulous detail. โ€œHe did more for production design than anyone else by the quality of his designs,โ€ said Adamโ€™s biographer Christopher Frayling to The Guardian. โ€œAbout halfway through the Bond films, they were actually constructing the scripts around his sets.โ€ Adamโ€™s setsย were so impressive in scale and realism that heย was occasionally met with confusion from critics. In interviews, Adam recalled several incidents in which criticsย thought he was actually inside the restricted confines of Fort Knox during the making of Goldfinger or, yes, even inside of an actual volcano for You Only Live Twice. As he told the Los Angeles Times: โ€œOne critic asked, โ€˜How did you ever get inside the volcano?โ€™ I didnโ€™t get inside the volcano! I think that is the function of a film designer, to create something which the audience has never seen.โ€

Ken-Adam-DR-No-Casino-Gear-Patrol
The casino from Dr. No (1962) where, for the very first time, we hear the phrase โ€œBond, James Bond.โ€
Goldfinger (GB, US 1964, Guy Hamilton)
The vault at Fort Knox, as depicted in Goldfinger (1964).
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv
Ken-Adam-Goldfinger-Laser-Gear-Patrol
โ€œNo, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die!โ€
Ken-Adam-Thunderball-Spectre-Conference-Room-Gear-Patrol
SPECTREโ€™s conference room from Thunderball (1965).
You only Live Twice (GB, US 1967, Lewis Gilbert)
Ernst Stavro Blofeld’s island volcano hideout in You Only Live Twice (1967).
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv
You only Live Twice (GB, US 1967, Lewis Gilbert)
An interior of the same hideout.
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv
Diamonds Are Forever (GB, US 1971, Guy Hamilton)
Las Vegas’s fictitious Whyte House Hotel from Diamonds Are Forever (1971).
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv
The Spy Who Loved Me (GB, US 1977, Lewis Gilbert)
The villianous lair of Karl Stromberg in The Spy Who Loved Me (1971).
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv
Ken-Adam-Moonraker-Launch-Complex-Gear-Patrol.jpg
Moonraker (1979) might be Adamโ€™s finest work. Pictured here is the nefarious launch complex of Hugo Drax.
Ken-Adam-Moonraker-Space-Station-Gear-Patrol
…And his associated space station.
Todd-White Art Photography
Moonraker (GB, FR 1979, Lewis Gilbert)
…And its associated anti gravity room.
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv
dr strangelove or how i learned to stop worrying and love the b
Not to be confined to just Bond, Adam was also responsible for the iconic war room from Dr. Strangelove (1964) in what might be his most influential piece of design.
Deutsche Kinemathek – Ken Adam Archiv

All photos courtesy of the Ken Adam Archive and Deutsche Kinemathek.