(Not) Filmed in Shropshire
Sunday 22nd March 2009, 1:00PM GMT.
Toby Neal looks at the Shropshire films which were never made.

Keira Knightley in the grounds of Stokesay Court in Shropshire in a scene from Atonement. Other Shropshire films never got as far as the filming stage.
In September 1947 a film crew descended on Bomere Pool, near Bayston Hill, to start preliminary shooting for “Precious Bane”, a movie of the Mary Webb novel, which was to feature two of the big stars of the day, Ann Todd and David Farrar.
Have you seen it? Thought not. Not this version, anyway. It was never made – just one of a number of Shropshire movies, or scenes from movies shot in Shropshire, which disappeared without trace.
Not to worry. A couple of years later the film crews were in Shropshire again on the Mary Webb trail, to make “Gone To Earth”. This time Farrar was teamed up with Jennifer Jones, another big star of the day.
Various locations around Shropshire were used, but perhaps the area which remembers it best is Much Wenlock.
And that film definitely did see the light of day. But there is a fly in the ointment. A number of scenes shot on location in Shropshire were either cut from the movie entirely, or re-shot in a studio. An example of the former was a scene shot at Farley Crossing, which was apparently axed because telegraph poles, out of keeping with the period of the film, were in view. And of the latter, it is said that a scene shot in the George & Dragon pub in Much Wenlock was later re-created in the studio.
Going back a bit further, a film crew descended on the wartime Rednal Airfield, near Oswestry, in 1943. Some Gloster Gladiator biplanes flew in, along with a Wellington bomber to be used as a camera plane, and the intention was to make a movie called “Signed With Their Honour” about the air war in Greece. However, it was not long before two of the biplanes had crashed, and this seems to have spelt the death knell of the project. Whether any footage survives is unknown.
Moving to more modern times, Richard Burton came to Ellesmere College in May 1978 for the filming of “Absolution”. According to comments on the internet, it’s a stinker which sat on the shelf until well after Burton’s death, only seeing light of day (presumably by coming out on video) as late as 1988. At least you can see it, then.
There was a lot of excitement in Ludlow in the year 2000 when “Unconditional Love” was partly filmed there, with Kathy Bates, Rupert Everett, Richard Briers, and dozens of local extras. And then . . . nothing. It’s another one that sat on the shelf for years, eventually coming out on DVD in 2004. (It was apparently retitled “Who Shot Victor Fox? although there are plenty of references under the original name on the internet).
The same fate befell many local extras used in the recent blockbuster hit “Atonement” starring Keira Knightley, much of which was filmed at Stokesay Court, near Craven Arms. There was one big scene at the end in which all the extras appeared. Yet when the film was released, there it was – gone.
The ending had been changed. And the Shropshire extras were left on the cutting room floor.
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And what about Hugh Grant in “The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain”? It was filmed just outside Oswestry, wasn’t it?
And what all us “expat” Salopians want to know is where in Shropshire are the Muller Lite adverts filmed, it looks gorgeous!
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The film “The Longest Day” wasn’t filmed in Shropshire either.
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I went to watch some filming of ‘Clockwise’ {John Cleese} as I had painted some fake road signs for it on a caravan park just outside Knockin. Much expense obviously spent on a bridal scene involving several halved Morris Minors, halved for technical filming purposes I suppose and not a part of the story, was it in the final cut? er..nope.
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I think some of ‘Star Wars’ was filmed in Shropshire. And ‘Bladerunner’…
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I was a uniformed ‘Guard’ in International Velvet, filmed at Burghley in 1977. It was a real eye-opener in how long it takes to make a film. There for an entire week 8am-5pm, the cross country riding lasts 12 minutes on the screen. But at least I can see myself, if only fleetingly and from the eyebrows downwards!
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jennifer jones who starred in gone to earth in 1949, recently celebrated her 90th birthday
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katie – Please do not tell me that you do not recognise the iconic Shropshire/Telford landmarks. The Wrekin and Ironbridge in the muller advert??
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Second Best (1994) was partly filmed at the bording school Bedstone College near Craven Arms. In the film it was staged as an orphanage, which was apt as thats how i felt went I was at school there.
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There was a film crew in Wellington in the mid 1970s. 1973, 1974 or maybe 1975. They were driving an open armoured car up and down Church Street, stopping just outside Barclay’s Bank at one point.
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