The latest James Bond movie has broken a few box office records since its release, including the one for biggest opening of all time in the U.K. But SPECTRE, which also topped the box office in the U.S. over the weekend, has achieved some other feats that don't have to do with theatrical performance.

The movie officially features the largest film stunt explosion in history, as acknowledged by Guinness World Records. The honor specifically goes to Effects Supervisor Chris Corbould (who is also an Oscar winner for Inception and nominee for The Dark Knight) for creating the esteemed sequence.

Taking place in Erfoud, Morocco, the blast had a total yield of 68.47 tonnes of TNT equivalent and was the result of detonating 8,418 liters of kerosene with 33 kg of powder explosives - and it lasted for over 7.5 seconds.

For those of you who've seen the movie, it's the explosion of the SPECTRE facility in the desert, which was shot in Morocco, as Bond (Daniel Craig) and Dr. Madeleine Swann (Lea Seydoux) look on. If you haven't seen the movie, you can see what it looks like behind the scenes below.

Obviously for the sequence to break the record there has to have been previous holders of the honor. Reportedly, SPECTRE dethroned Blown Away, a movie released way back in 1994. 

Here are two other past movies and sequences, both of them helmed by Michael Bay, to hold similar distinctions:

2001: Pearl Harbor had the "most expensive explosion sequence in a movie."

2009: Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen had the "biggest explosion on film with actors present."

SPECTRE was also honored with the Guinness World Record for the first Bond theme -- Sam Smith's "The Writing's on the Wall" -- to reach number one on the U.K. charts. Here's the video for that: