|      Two famous    film cars are going up for sale - the Ferrari from classic 80s movie Ferris    Bueller's Day Off and James Bond's submersible Lotus. The Bond car, which    appeared in The Spy Who Loved Me, goes under the hammer in London in    September, while the Bueller car is being sold off at Pebble Beach in    California in August. Auctioneers say the    famous Lotus Esprit was the only one made for the film and cost about £65,000    when built, the equivalent of £330,000 today. Known as Wet Nellie on    the set of the 1977 film, the propeller-powered vehicle laid    "undiscovered" in a Long Island storage unit for 10 years. A local couple    unexpectedly found themselves the owners of the iconic motor after they won a    blind auction for the contents of the unit. The fully-functioning    Lotus was originally built by Perry Oceanographic in Florida and was piloted    by a retired US Navy Seal. 
 The Ferris Bueller car,    which gets wrecked at the end of the 1986 film, is depicted as a Ferrari 250    GT California. However, film-makers    actually used three replicas built by Californian company Modena Design &    Development. But with 500 horsepower,    its new owner will certainly get supercar performance. Modena co-founder Neil    Glassmoyer said the company built the replicas in four weeks. "Two were    interchangeably used as hero and stunt cars, and one was a rolling fibreglass    shell that was used in the destruction scene," he said. "This car was    actually intended for the stunt work, but both saw action, and both wound up    with broken front suspension bolts because the big jump scene took nine takes    between the two cars." Glassmoyer said director    John Hughes was also considering a Porsche Turbo for the film, but eventually    chose the iconic red sportscar. The car goes up for sale    on August 17, but will have to go some way to beat the prices achieved by    authentic Ferrari classics. In 2010, DJ Chris Evans    paid £12m for a 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO.  |    
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Matthew Broderick took the 'Ferrari' for a spin in    Ferris Bueller's Day Off