Significance in popular culture
Upper portion of the Elizabeth Tower, as featured in many films (
here pictured in 1967).
The clock has become a symbol of the United Kingdom and London,
particularly in the visual media. When a television or film-maker wishes
to indicate a generic location in Britain, a popular way to do so is to
show an image of the tower, often with a
red double-decker bus or
black cab in the foreground.
[45]
The sound of the clock chiming has also been used this way in audio media, but as the
Westminster Quarters
are heard from other clocks and other devices, the unique nature of
this sound has been considerably diluted. Big Ben is a focus of
New Year celebrations in the United Kingdom,
with radio and TV stations tuning to its chimes to welcome the start of
the New Year. As well, to welcome in 2012, the clock tower itself was
lit with
fireworks that exploded at every toll of Big Ben.
[46] Similarly, on
Remembrance Day,
the chimes of Big Ben are broadcast to mark the 11th hour of the 11th
day of the 11th month and the start of two minutes' silence.
[47]
Londoners who live an appropriate distance from the Tower and Big Ben
can, by means of listening to the chimes both live and on analogue
radio, hear the bell strike thirteen times. This is possible due to what
amounts to an offset between live and electronically transmitted chimes
since the
speed of sound is a lot slower than the speed of radio waves.
[48] Guests are invited to count the chimes aloud as the radio is gradually turned down.
ITN's
News at Ten
opening sequence formerly featured an image of the Elizabeth Tower with
the sound of Big Ben's chimes punctuating the announcement of the news
headlines.
[49] The Big Ben chimes (known within ITN as "The Bongs") continue to be used during the headlines and all
ITV News
bulletins use a graphic based on the Westminster clock dial. Big Ben
can also be heard striking the hour before some news bulletins on
BBC Radio 4 (6 pm and midnight, plus 10 pm on Sundays) and the
BBC World Service,
a practice that began on 31 December 1923. The sound of the chimes are
sent in real time from a microphone permanently installed in the tower
and connected by line to
Broadcasting House.
[citation needed]
The Tower has appeared in many films, most notably in the 1978 version of
The Thirty Nine Steps, in which the hero,
Richard Hannay,
attempted to halt the clock's progress (to prevent a linked bomb
detonating) by hanging from the minute hand of its western dial.
[50] In the fourth
James Bond film,
Thunderball, a mistaken extra strike of Big Ben on the hour is designated by criminal organisation
SPECTRE to be the signal that the British Government has acceded to its nuclear extortion demands. It was also used in the filming of
Shanghai Knights starring
Jackie Chan and
Owen Wilson, and was depicted as being partially destroyed in the
Doctor Who episode "
Aliens of London". Big Ben was also featured in the closing scene of
James McTeigue's film
V for Vendetta in which a futuristic depiction of
Guy Fawkes
succeeds in blowing up parliament, and the tower's bells and pendulum
are sounded with a final screech at the beginning of the explosion. The
apparent "thirteen chimes" detailed above was also a major plot device
in the
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons episode, "
Big Ben Strikes Again". It has featured prominently in several animated
Walt Disney films, including
The Great Mouse Detective,
Peter Pan and
Cars 2.
At the close of the polls for the
2010 General Election the results of the national exit poll were projected onto the south side of the Elizabeth Tower.
[51]
On 27 July 2012, starting at 8:12 a.m, Big Ben chimed thirty times,
to welcome in the London Olympic Games (i.e. the 30th Olympiad), which
officially began that day.