The scene stealer

1 min read

Buy this Iso Grifo and your next task will be to find a DVD of crime flick The Violent Professionals – and look out for your car

Italian lines with American brawn – just 330 Series I Iso Grifos were made. Below: recently restored to original condition
JEREMY CLIFF ©2023 COURTESY OF RM SOTHEBY’S

Considering that some still regard it as a bit of a mongrel, Italy’s Iso Grifo has a pretty impressive pedigree. Its sleek, grand-tourer bodywork was penned by Giorgetto Giugiaro (whose CV also includes the Lotus Esprit and the Volkswagen Golf ); its mechanicals were designed by Giotto Bizzarrini (who was responsible for Ferrari’s celebrated 250 GTO); and its powerplant came from the Chevrolet Corvette.

The brainchild of Iso founder Renzo Rivolta (whose industrialist forebears made a fortune from products as diverse as bubble cars and refrigerators), the sporting two-seater launched in 1965 was to be sold alongside the two-plus-two Iso Rivolta.

The Grifo, named after the griffin, the half-lion, half-eagle mythical king of beasts, was intended to provide serious competition to the likes of Ferrari and Maserati by combining the beauty and style for which Italian GT cars were renowned with the strength and reliability for which they weren’t – hence the use of tough American gearboxes and V8 engines.

The first models used small-block 5.4-litre Corvette engines, which, thanks to the car weighing less than 1000kg, gave a top speed of around 170mph – instantly making it the fastest road car of the day. A mere 330 such Series I cars are believed to have been made, of which this is an example.

Originally sold to an Italian buyer in the spring of 1967, it achieved a modicum of celebrity status six years later when it appeared in Sergio Martino’s 1973 Mafia crime t

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