Did they destroy a real Ferrari in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off?
Go ahead and breathe a sigh of relief. The “Ferrari” that crashes out of a window and hurls to the earth in one of the film’s most iconic scenes is really a carefully crafted fake! A firm called Modena Design handled the creation of these replicas—one of which would sell for $360,000 at an auction in 2020. Go ahead and breathe a sigh of relief. The “Ferrari” that crashes out of a window and hurls to the earth in one of the film’s most iconic scenes is really a carefully crafted fake!
What car is the Ferrari Killer?
Win America’s Ferrari Killer – The 2005 Ford GT. Le Mans and humiliated Ferrari on the world stage. To honor that legacy, Ford built a modern masterpiece—the 2005 Ford GT, Mid-engine, supercharged and Street-legal. I’m inside America’s most famous example of the latter: the GT40, the “Ferrari killer” of the 1960s. The Ford GT40 MK II was the weapon that Henry Ford II and Carroll Shelby employed against Enzo Ferrari’s team in the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans, amazingly winning the top three places.
Who bought $70 million dollar Ferrari?
Chicago-based David MacNeil has turned over a reported $70 million for a Tour de France-winning 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO. David MacNeil got more than a rare car last year when he spent a reported $70 million to purchase one of only about three-dozen 1963 Ferrari 250 GTOs. He also got a spot on the list of the world’s top 100 car collectors, a list annually compiled by The Collector Car Trust and published in its yearly magazine, The Key.