Britain's movie magic has made it the most sought after filming location in the world


Filming of Fantastic Beasts at St George's Hall

Filming of Fantastic Beasts at St George’s Hall (Image: Liverpool Echo)

The UK’s proud legacy of producing era-defining film franchises like Bond, Harry Potter, Game Of Thrones and The Crown is respected and envied across the globe.

And the increased demand for blockbuster films and TV dramas for streaming services like Netflix has created an urgent need for more film studios, and skilled crews, in this country.

Robert Laycock, who is building a major studio in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, says: “We have to make sure we have the facilities where and when people want them.

“When you are making a film you go where the talent is and for the next 100 years Europe, and particularly the UK, is going to be a much stronger place to set up these facilities for big budget productions.”

A recent report from the British Film Institute (BFI) showed UK-made films now represent 16 percent of global ticket sales.

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A staggering 85 percent of these were produced in a west London to Buckinghamshire corridor that includes the iconic Pinewood and Shepperton film studios.

As a result of this success the UK film and TV industry is growing 15 times faster than the UK economy, with a record £6.27billion spent on film and high-end television production here last year. About 92 percent of this inward investment comes from the US and the spending on film and TV production is forecast to grow to around £7.5billion by 2025.

The BFI recently said there will be 20,000 new roles in the industry, named by one in five people as their dream job, in the next few years. Tax breaks for big budget film productions brought in by Gordon Brown in 2007 were extended to high-end television, animation and video games by the then Culture and Digital Economy Secretary Ed Vaizey.

The now Lord Vaizey of Didcot is also credited with helping keep the filming of the Harry Potter movies at Warner Bros Leavesden Studios in Hertfordshire in 2013.

Film tax relief is available at 25 percent of qualifying film production expenditure regardless of budget, as long as 10 percent of core expenditure of the production takes place in the UK.

British Film Institute

BFI said there will be new roles in the industry (Image: Camera Press)

Leo Pearlman, managing partner of the Fulwell 73 Group, which made The Late Late Show with James Corden, who is also one of the production company’s partners.

He is excited by the increased demand for cutting-edge film studios in the UK, along with well-trained crews, that the ever-growing need for high quality content for streaming services has created.

Leo says: “While the US for one reason or another has not been able to provide quite the same supply, the UK has stepped in.

“The UK has a rich history of making big budget films and high-end television with the iconic studios we have like Pinewood and Shepperton.

“When you talk to the streamers’ heads of content they are excited by coming and shooting in studios that have such a heritage. As soon as they get to the UK they realise the locations that are available across this incredible country are second to none.”

He adds: “It’s a short hop over from the States but then once you are in the country the variety of locations are within touch, whether cities, the coast or the countryside. Being English-speaking also plays a massive part. All these elements combined have led to this explosion.”

Sean Connery on set of James Bond:

The Bond films made from UK film production (Image: Getty)

Robert Laycock, CEO and co-founder of Marlow Film Studios, says: “The reason people are drawn to the UK is our blockbuster history, so if you go back to the Bond films, Star Wars, the original Batman and Superman films, then later the Harry Potter films and added on top of this all the video on demand with Game Of Thrones and The Crown.”

He adds that 50 percent of households across the globe now having access to the internet has created increased demand for the high quality content for which Britain has a multi-generational track record.

Robert, who worked on the production of multiple Oscar-winning film Shakespeare In Love starring Gwyneth Paltrow, says: “The shift to digital has brought recognition that if you want to get a great show you turn to Britain.Right now the sequel to the Wizard Of Oz, Wicked, is being filmed in a village in Buckinghamshire.

“Pinewood and Shepperton are at the pinnacle of our industry, and someone like Tom Cruise has been spending hundreds of millions of pounds making two Mission Impossible films here. At Marlow Film Studio we will create 2,000 new jobs and another 2,000 indirect jobs.”

Three of the six Mission Impossible films released to date have been mainly based in the UK and the next two, due out this summer and next year also used Warner Bros Leavesden Studios.

Cruise, 60, was granted special permission to film inside Westminster Abbey, where the Coronation of King Charles and Queen Camilla took place on May 6, for the eighth instalment.

Popular Harry Potter was shot in the UK

Popular Harry Potter was shot in the UK (Image: Warner Bros.)

The additional demand for film studio space and highly skilled crews has also inspired the Fulwell 73 Group to build one of the biggest purpose-built facilities in Europe in Sunderland, in partnership with Cain International.

This £450million project for a 1.7million square foot facility will create about 8,500 new jobs and generate about £250million income revenue for the region in the next decade. Construction is due to start later this year or early next year.

Leo says: “Huge Hollywood blockbusters come up and shoot in the North East, yet there is no facility for them to stay here.

“As an industry we do not have enough crew members to work on productions, yet in the North East there is a standing army of highly skilled blue collar workers who with just a bit of retraining could become a workforce for studios to rival that in south-east England.”

Paul Baker, an international studio development advisor for FulwellCain Studios, adds: “This is a destination that has already attracted productions from The Avengers to Indiana Jones And The Dial of Destiny.

“What tends to happen at the moment is those shows base themselves in the South East at one of the studios and then go to the spectacular locations we have in the North East, from the Pennines, to Northumberland and its beautiful castles and coastline.”

Lord Vaizey counts his work in fine tuning the tax breaks for film and TV as one of his greatest achievements as a minister, saying: “It is one of the things I am proudest of.”

He adds: “Every prime minister and minister should be proud to say we have a cluster (of studios) in London and the South East that rivals any film and TV studio in the world.

“And we have satellite clusters in places like Northern Ireland, Birmingham is building the largest TV studios in Europe and other parts of the country.”

Digbeth Loc Studios are being built in Birmingham by Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight, creating 700 jobs and injecting £30million into the local economy.

Minister for Investment Lord Johnson said: “The UK has world-class production talent ranging from visual effects, virtual production, sound and make-up to line production and cinematography. I’m determined to see more of this talent flourish through growing investment in our creative industries.”



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