Equipment
4474/219hp, 5-speed, phone dial wheels, Intelligent tires, rear window wiper, power windows, air conditioning, factory cassette stereo.
Condition
The hero car from the 1983 film Risky Business. One of three 928s used for the film but this one got the most screen time. Left the factory on white but repainted gold for the movie. Tom Cruise reportedly learned how to drive stick in his car. Later discovered in California and refreshed to how it appeared in the film. It presents like a nearly new car and it would be a desirable, well-equipped early 928 even without Risky Business, but the movie magic is the main appeal here.
Market commentary
While other movie cars have gone for more – the Bullitt Mustang for $3.71 million in 2020, the Goldfinger DB5 for $4.6 million in 2010 – the 928 sale is still impressive given it’s far from one of the most iconic cars to have graced the silver screen. Multiple 928s were used in Risky Business, a car that was chosen by screenwriter and director, Paul Brickman. Barrett-Jackson confirmed that its auction car received the most screen time – and isn’t the car that ended up in Lake Michigan. (That was a 928 stripped of its powertrain.) It did also star in a documentary surrounding filmmaker Lewis Johnsen’s quest to find the car, and uniquely, it was the very car in which star Cruise learned to operate a manual gearbox. Since filming it was part of a private collection, and has later been seen in Porsche Cars North America’s collection – ironic, given Porsche reportedly distanced itself from the film at the time of production – and at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles. History aside, it’s otherwise a standard 1979 928, complete with 4.5-litre naturally-aspirated V8 and the original telephone-dial wheels. It has changed colours a few times – the car was originally white, painted gold for filming, then being repainted in the original white and then returned to movie spec when Johnsen later rediscovered the car. If there’s one more eyebrow-raising stat from Houston, it’s that the 928 was the only non-American car in the top ten sales, sitting right at the top above a pair of 2019 Ford GTs and then an ex-Stirling Moss 1966 Shelby GT350 racing car.