Bottoms Up Club

The Bottoms Up Club was a girlie bar in Hong Kong. The bar became notorious for its appearance in the 1974 James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun.[1][2] The interior of the club evoked the interior of the club as seen in the film.

History

The Club opened at 14 Hankow Road[3] in Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, in March[4] or May[1] 1971. One of its early managers was Pat Sephton,[4][5] a former Windmill model.[6] A 1994 court ruling requested it to remove its naked-buttocks neon sign, and to have its naked dancers wear bras or negliges. The Tsim Sha Tsui location closed on April 2004. Rising rents were cited as possible reasons for the closure.[1][4] The Club re-opened at the first floor of David House, 37-39 Lockhart Road in Wan Chai[7][8] in 2004, this time mainly as a sports bar, with one of the original bars being recreated in a back room.[4]

In July 2009 the club closed down.

In popular culture

At the time of the film, the club was located in Tsim Sha Tsui, on the Kowloon side of Victoria Harbour. This gave rise to a movie blooper when Bond, played by Roger Moore, is picked up outside the club by British agents posing as police, and is told he is being taken to a police station on the Kowloon side (of Hong Kong Harbour), when he is in fact already there.

According to one source, while the film features footage of the exterior of the Club, the scenes inside the Club were actually filmed in a studio in the United Kingdom, where it had been recreated.[4]

The club also appeared in the 1994 Wong Kar-wai movie Chungking Express. Takeshi Kaneshiro and Brigitte Lin have drinks there before going to a hotel room.

The club appears also in the book Zero Minus Ten by Raymond Benson (1997) where James Bond meets Sunni Pei (consume girl and striptease dancer), a member of the Hong Kong mafia "The Triads".

References

External links

Coordinates: 22°17′48″N 114°10′16″E / 22.2966°N 114.1710°E / 22.2966; 114.1710

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, September 08, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.