Economy

Doctor Who and Rain Dogs among film and TV productions to bring in £20m to Bristol economy


A 60th anniversary episode of Doctor Who, true crime drama The Sixth Commandment and comedy drama Rain Dogs were among the TV series and films made in Bristol which helped to generate more than £20m for the local economy last year. Bristol Film Office show filmmaking levels in the city had ‘held strong’ over the previous 12 months, with its latest figures showing 220 recorded productions bringing in £20.1m of inward investment.

It comes after a post-pandemic surge in filmmaking in Bristol was valued at £20.8m during the 2021-22 financial year – the largest contribution the sector had made in a decade.




A total of 838 filming days took place at the Bristol City Council-owned Bottle Yard Studios in Hengrove and/or on location around the city assisted by Bristol Film Office. This was down from the 1,067 filming days carried out in previous year.

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The number of licences issued by Bristol Film Office, permitting filming to take place on council-owned streets, properties and green spaces, was 502 – also down on the previous period, when 709 were granted.

Other major titles filmed around Bristol during 2022-23 were season four of Netflix show Sex Education, starring Gillian Anderson, which was filmed at University of Bristol campus locations, while the upcoming 80’s Jilly Cooper drama Rivals – which stars David Tennant, Aidan Turner, Alexander Hassall and Danny Dyer – was made at Bottle Yard Studios.



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