Category

LEGO® Speed Champions Film Vehicles

Six LEGO® Speed Champions sets sit in the film-vehicle category. They're the cars Speed Champions licensed not from a manufacturer but from a film studio — Universal's <em>Fast & Furious</em>, EON Productions' <em>James Bond</em>, Pixar's <em>Cars</em>, Universal's <em>Back to the Future</em>. The category is exclusively 8-stud era, and it represents Speed Champions' most-recent strategic move: licensing cinematic memory rather than only manufacturer brands.

7 sets · Updated 2026-05-11

The category opens with 007 Aston Martin DB5 (LEGO® 76911, 2022) — the silver birch DB5 from Goldfinger (1964), the most-cited car in cinema history. The set includes the same gadgets the prop department added in 1964 (rotating number plates, ejector seat, machine-gun headlamps), and was the line's first cinema-licensed entry. The DB5 has appeared in eight Bond films across sixty years, making it the connective tissue of the entire franchise.

The Fast & Furious thread is the largest single licence inside the category — three sets so far. 2 Fast 2 Furious Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34) (LEGO® 76917, 2023) is Brian O'Conner's silver-and-blue R34 from the second film (2003), the model often credited with introducing R34 GT-R culture to the Western mainstream. Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat (LEGO® 77237, 2025) is Brian O'Conner's later-franchise Hellcat. 2 Fast 2 Furious Honda S2000 (LEGO® 77241, 2025) is Suki's pink S2000 — one of the franchise's first prominent female-driver cars and a 2003-era JDM convertible centrepiece. (Dom Toretto's 1970 Charger R/T sits in the Dodge brand and Fast & Furious theme hubs but is categorised as film-licensed rather than film-vehicle.)

The 2026 wave takes the category somewhere new — entirely fictional vehicles. Lightning McQueen (LEGO® 77255) is the protagonist of Pixar's Cars (2006), a stylised 50s-NASCAR-derived character, the first fully-fictional car in the line. Time Machine from Back to the Future (LEGO® 77256) is the DeLorean DMC-12 modified by Doc Brown into a flux-capacitor-powered time machine — the most-cited modified production car in cinema, drawn from the 1985 Robert Zemeckis film. Together they signal a category broadening: Speed Champions' film-vehicle slot now covers everything from a real production car with on-screen modifications, to a fictional anthropomorphic character, with the bridge between them being whether the vehicle came from a screenplay or a factory.

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