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Harry Potter, A Fish Called Wanda, Inspector Morse, Downton Abbey and X Men are just a few of the films that have become synonymous with the world renowned University City of Oxford. This new Pitkin souvenir guide highlights key sites that have become famously linked to these internationally successful and much loved films and TV specials. Not limited to Oxford city centre, this guide will also include the often-used film location Blenheim Palace, located just outside Oxford. With 15 individual Walks around Oxford, and information on both architecture and filming history, this guide will become a must-have souvenir for every visitor to Oxford.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2018
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‘a city … steeped in storytelling … a place where the past and the present jostle each other on the pavement’
The camera pans over domes and spires, cobbled squares and neo-classical pediments… From Harold Pinter’s Accident (1967) to Harry Potter’s Hogwarts, Oxford’s ancient and beautiful buildings have appeared in dozens of movies and TV series in the last half-century or so. This guidebook takes you to the city’s best-loved sights, whether it’s Lyra’s college playgrounds, the cloisters where Harry Potter learns about Quidditch, or a lamppost straight out of C.S. Lewis’s Narnia.
In recent years, the cast of Mamma Mia! have cycled over Oxford cobbles for an irrepressible sequel Here We Go Again (2018) and the glowing stained glass of Exeter chapel formed a backdrop for evil sorcery in Doctor Strange (2016).
Supercars screeched down ancient Holywell Street in Transformers: The Last Knight (2017) while, down the road, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz starred in The Favourite (2018) as rivals for the attention of Queen Anne (Olivia Colman).
Oxford colleges, libraries, chapels and museums have not only been locations for films, they also inspired the original stories – from Shadowlands, the story of C.S. Lewis, filmed in the author’s college, Magdalen, to The Golden Compass, Philip Pullman’s Oxford-based fantasy, where Exeter becomes fictional Jordan College. Pullman has called Oxford ‘a city … steeped in storytelling, … a place where the past and the present jostle each other on the pavement’. Perhaps it is this that makes it such a magnet for filmmakers.
The walks in this book take in some of the city’s most delightful and interesting corners and venture out into the nearby countryside, to pubs and palaces, farms and forests. You can, of course, enjoy them without seeing the films. But fans of Inspector Morse or Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings or Downton Abbey will find these landscapes full of familiar sights and inspirational places.
A familiar view across the Oxford skyline with its towers and distant hills
Stories just seem to pour out of Oxford. The walks in this book explore some of the inspirations and locations associated with Oxford’s most famous writers, such as Lewis Carroll and Philip Pullman. C.S. Lewis, who wrote the Narnia books, and J.R.R. Tolkien, author of The Lord of the Rings, met over tea in 1926 and grew to be friends, discussing their ideas in a group known as the Inklings, which often met in the Eagle and Child pub.
In the film Shadowlands (1993), about the life of C.S. Lewis, Anthony Hopkins played the author, and Debra Winger was his wife, Joy. In The Golden Compass (2007), the film of Philip Pullman’s novel, Lyra grows up in ‘Jordan’ College, a fictional institution based on the author’s old college, Exeter. Pullman’s works are some of the more recent additions to the venerable tradition of stories set and filmed in Oxford, from Brideshead Revisited to Morse and beyond. A novel by Nicholas Mosley inspired Harold Pinter’s portentous screenplay for Accident (1967); it centres on a pipe-smoking, married Oxford don (Dirk Bogarde) in love with his aristocratic Austrian student.
In 1981, the celebrated TV mini-series of Brideshead Revisited, based on the novel by Evelyn Waugh, was filmed partly in Hertford, Waugh’s old college – even using his old room. Charles Ryder (Jeremy Irons) is supposed to be studying here, while Sebastian Flyte (Anthony Andrews) is at Christ Church. In the 2008 film, Lincoln represents both colleges, while – in both the film and TV series – the Brideshead estate itself is represented by Castle Howard in Yorkshire.
Robert Taylor and Maureen O’Sullivan on a film poster for A Yank at Oxford (1938), remade on location as Oxford Blues (1984)
Filming of ITV drama Endeavour in Oxford with actors Shaun Evans and Jack Laskey in 2015
The poster for the film version of Brideshead Revisited (2008), starring Emma Thompson
Oxford Blues (1984) was a remake of the 1938 film called A Yank at Oxford starring Vivien Leigh and Robert Taylor. Rob Lowe played Las Vegas casino worker Nick Di Angelo, studying at Oxford in the hope of impressing glamorous Lady Victoria – it’s packed with recognisable locations, including Oriel College. Not long after filming A Fish Called Wanda, Michael Palin was back in town, playing an Oxford don in American Friends (1991). Also partly set in the university, True Blue (1996) adapts Daniel Topolski’s book about a mutiny among the Oxford team training for the Oxford and Cambridge boat race.
Oxford-based author Colin Dexter created the character of Inspector Morse and Dexter’s mystery novels became a popular ITV drama. Both as the young detective in Endeavour (played by Shaun Evans) and as the original veteran inspector (John Thaw), Morse has solved countless murders in Oxford, as has erstwhile sidekick Lewis (Kevin Whately) in his own spin-off series together with Sergeant Hathaway (Laurence Fox).
Oxford’s formal cloisters and echoing quads have represented a variety of real and fictional schools and the university often pops up in films about education. Equally predictably, this ancient city has attracted a number of classic costume dramas, providing convincingly authentic streets and timeworn buildings.
In Alan Bennett’s The History Boys (2006), about a lively group of teenagers applying for Oxbridge, the boys visit various colleges for interviews. At the end of An Education (2009), Nick Hornby’s screenplay, based on Lynn Barber’s life story, specifies: ‘Swelling orchestral music, wide shot of Oxford spires’, then a happy close-up before the camera pulls back to show Jenny (played by Carey Mulligan) ‘cycling through the streets of Oxford’.
Oxford doubled as a school for Young Sherlock Holmes (1985): the outside of the teenage sleuth’s Brompton School is actually Brasenose College, while the inside is Eton. In Another Country
