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Seriously, still a great plot because it doesn't matter if the science/math is correct or not- Goldfinger believed it to be true.
Oh really.
Well short answer, the writers were too clever for there own good, making the story more complicated than it had to be. If Goldfinger could have got a dirty bomb into America, he could have got a full fledged atom bomb in too, and that's what he should have used. The real Auric Goldfinger wouldn't have devoted 18 years of his life so something without checking to see if gold remained radioactive fore more than a few weeks. Besides, 'small nuclear device' can cover all matter of sins.
I don't agree with that either, considering that the dirty bomb wouldn't do the kind of damage a huge nuclear blast would and Goldfinger and his people would never make it out of there alive unless they got a major, major, major head start before the detonation of the nuclear bomb which they didn't have anyway. I don't follow that logic in the slightest, and Goldfinger himself never once mentions destroying the gold in his plans. He even calls Fort Knox his bank, which would be meaningless if he blew it sky high. It makes the plan more evil if he irradiates the gold and leaves it in Fort Knox to tease the American government who still have it in their possession but now can't even use it because of the radiation. A big tease, if you will.
Yes,sorry for missing that. I posted something similar on another thread earlier, but without the technical details, (which I had read, but could not remember accurately.) Thanks for digging that up.
I think you're giving the fat man too much credit. For one thing he brings the gangsters clear across the country to get off on explaining his plan, then kills them anyway. As I said before, that nuclear blast would have absolutely demolished everything within a massive radius of Fort Knox, so much so that Goldfinger wouldn't be able to outrun it. He would have to be out of range for a long time ahead of the blast to escape a vaporizing death, which he wouldn't have been in the film.
Listen, I know you love Goldfinger and realize you'll do anything to defend it. It's a natural human response to treat those things we love with an often blind love, no matter the faults they may have because of exactly that: we love them. I'm like that with my favorite Bond films too, so I can respect that.
You're right, I love Goldfinger and I am willing to overlook his shortcomings, like being stupid enough to continue his card cheating and gold smuggling right up until a few days before Operation Grand Slam, or the stupidity of buying a farm in Kentucky when he planned to undertake such a plot so close buy, or how he didn't kill Bond with the laser at Auric Industries in Switzerland when he had the chance. At the end of the day, Goldfinger was the first Bond movie I ever saw, and it blew my young little mind. It is the reason that I am the mega-Bond fan that I am today, so no matter how silly his plan may be in some parts, the film is always going to have a special place in my heart.
- If there was $15 billion worth of gold in Fort Knox, is that 10,500 tons, as Bond calculated? No. Since the price of gold in 1964 was $35 per ounce (fixed by U.S. law), the amount of gold in ounces would be $15 billion/$35, which works out to 13,392 tons.
- Would the gold be unusable for exactly 58 years, as Goldfinger said? No. That's not how radioactivity works. Depending on whether the gold was irradiated and became radioactive, or whether the bomb sprayed radioactive cobalt onto the gold, the radioactive half-life would be different. But in any case, Bond's statement that the gold would be radioactive for 57 years, and Goldfinger's correction "58 years, to be exact", are absurd. Radiation doesn't last for X years and then abruptly stop. If a radioactive isotope has a half-life of, say, 10 years, then after 10 years, it's half as radioactive. After 20 years, it's 1/4 as radioactive. After 30 years, it's 1/8 as radioactive, etc. The radiation continues at gradually lower levels, so there is no "exact" time where the radioactivity ends.
- Goldfinger estimated that his gold will increase in value ten fold. Does this mean that the US holds 1/10th of the worlds gold?. No. Perhaps if Fort Knox held 90% of the world's gold (which it didn't), then after it blew up, there would be 10 times less gold in the world, so the price might go up tenfold. But supply and demand isn't that simple, and the gold market would undoubtedly have a panic reaction to Fort Knox blowing up, so Goldfinger's estimate of a tenfold price increase could be correct (but not because the US held 10% of the world's gold).