When Matthew Vaughn's Kingsman: The Secret Service hit screens in 2014, every detail of Harry Hart's Savile Row wardrobe was considered with the same precision one would apply to an actual intelligence operation. Among those details was the Bremont ALT1-WT WH Kingsman, an 18k rose gold world-timer limited to just 100 numbered pieces — worn on the wrist of Colin Firth's debonair agent throughout the film.
Bremont was selected by the production to develop three distinct, custom-made watches for the Kingsman universe, a brief that sits comfortably within the brand's ethos of functional, instrument-grade British watchmaking. The ALT1-WT WH Kingsman is built around Bremont's calibre BE-54AE, an automatic movement with world-time complication that displays all 24 time zones simultaneously via a rotating disc — practical for any agent operating across multiple continents. The case construction follows Bremont's patented Trip-Tick system, a three-part barrel design with a hardened central section that significantly increases resistance to shock and wear.
The choice of 18k rose gold elevates what is already a technically credible tool watch into genuine luxury territory. The world-timer function adds a complication with real on-screen logic — Harry Hart is, after all, a man with global responsibilities. Bremont co-founder Nick English appears briefly in the film as a Kingsman agent, underlining how deeply the brand was embedded in the production rather than simply badged onto it.
For Colin Firth, the watch becomes a character note. Hart is old-school British cool — measured, precise, devastating when necessary — and the Bremont ALT1-WT WH Kingsman reflects exactly that. The rose gold case signals refinement; the world-timer complication signals competence. It is a working watch worn by a man with a very specific job to do.
With production capped at 100 pieces, the Bremont ALT1-WT WH Kingsman trades on the secondary market at approximately $20,000, driven by both the scarcity of the edition and the enduring cultural footprint of the film. For collectors drawn to cinema-linked horological rarities, this one carries legitimate credentials on both counts.