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Blockbuster film location guide launched

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Scottish acting legend, James Cosmo, has spoken of the “magical quality” of films shot in Scotland as VisitScotland launches its new-look guide to big screen locations. 

 The star of iconic Scottish films, <em>Highlander</em>, <em>Braveheart</em> and <em>Trainspotting</em>, and TV fantasy series, <em>Game of Thrones</em>, pens the foreword to the national tourism organisation’s revamped guidebook, <em>Set in Scotland</em>.

 The 52-page guide features more than 150 films which have been shot entirely or partially in Scotland – 46 more than the previous version first published in 2015 – and details more than 100 film locations. It is available in VisitScotland iCentres across the country and can be downloaded from visitscotland.com.

Set in Scotland

Screen tourism – or set-jetting – is a global trend in which film or TV fans are inspired to visit a location after seeing it on screen. It comes in the form of visiting the exact filming location or providing the general motivation to book a holiday to the destination.

The trend is long-term, with many visitors citing film titles released long before their trip as motivation, and so can provide ongoing financial support to the regions and businesses linked to popular locations. 

VisitScotland hopes the new-look guide will offer further inspiration for visitors to explore across the regions, while providing a resource for the industry to create new experiences as part of Scotland’s national strategy to rebuild the visitor economy and ensure sustainable tourism thrives.

Previous research has shown that 17% of visitors from Scotland’s top international markets (USA, France and Germany) visit a film or TV location while on holiday in Scotland, while a recent Screen Scotland report valued screen tourism at £55 million to the national economy, based on those visiting film and TV locations, creating 1220 full-time jobs.

To date, Scotland has appeared in five of the top 30 highest grossing films of all time, which have brought in a total of $10.6 billion* at the box office worldwide. Among them are <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em> and <em>Avengers: Endgame</em>, which showed off Edinburgh’s gothic architecture and the quaint fishing village of St Abbs, respectively. 

  • Nature reserve, St Abb’s Head in the Scottish Borders, cared for by the National Trust for Scotland and accessed by the village of St Abbs, saw a 25% increase in visitors, to 63,721, following the release of Avengers: Endgame in 2019. In the two years prior to its release, the attraction had on average 49,000 visitors. Last year’s visitor numbers remained above pre-Avengers levels at 58,862, despite the continuing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • After the release of medieval epic Braveheart (1995) about Scottish freedom fighter William Wallace, the National Wallace Monument in Stirling reported visitor numbers leapt from 80,000 a year to nearly 200,000 in 1996. For the 10-year period from 1996 to 2005 the average annual number of visitors to the National Wallace Monument was 135,000, and it has remained above 100,000 over subsequent years.
  •  Dan Brown’s 2003 novel, The Da Vinci Code, had a huge effect on Rosslyn Chapel. Visitor numbers increased by 72 per cent, from 68,603 in 2004 to 118,151 in 2005. In 2006, following the release of the film directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks, visitor numbers reached 175,053, providing a major cash injection for conservation work at the site.
Actor James Cosmo, whose film career has spanned six decades, writes in the foreword:Jenni Steele, Film and Creative Industries Manager at VisitScotland, said: Some of the world’s biggest film franchises have chosen to come to our shores in recent years, from Batman to Avengers. This not only boosts the local economy in the short-term, which is particularly important for the recovery of tourism, but can provide an ongoing presence in popular culture – and streaming services – that can continue to reach new audiences and lead to visits long after a film’s release.“As we celebrate Scotland’s Year of Stories, our new-look Set in Scotland will hopefully inspire visitors to explore far beyond the film sets, and experience the people, the places, the history and culture, that have inspired many big screen storytellers.”Amanda Kilburn, Business Development Director at the Bo’ness &amp; Kinneil Railway, said:“Another great aspect of being a film location is that it brings us visitors that may not have come ‘just to see the trains’. Our Station Master has shown many visitors the exact spot that Claire and Frank bid farewell to each other in Outlander or talked about the footbridge and how it was used in The Railway Man. It is a great morale booster for our volunteers too, whom we rely on for survival, to say their railway has been in so many films and TV programmes.

“<em>We work hard to plan these projects with Location Managers and have a great relationship with film crews, many of which have worked with us numerous times and given us the ‘Film Crew Friendly’ badge. Our Railway and Museum are run almost entirely by volunteers of the Scottish Railway Preservation Society (SRPS) which is a Scottish charity, and all income helps fund the restoration and preservation of Scotland’s railway heritage, so we are extra grateful to be able to receive the financial support the TV and film productions bring.”</em>

Councillor Paul Garner, Economic Development Portfolio Holder at Falkirk Council,

“<em>The Falkirk area’s starring role in movie and TV film hits such as Outlaw King, World War Z, and Outlander, using the area’s unique and fantastic heritage locations, continues to inspire visitor interest from throughout the UK and aboard from those keen to chase the movie and television production magic.</em>

 It is fitting the launch is at Bo’ness and Kinneil Railway which has been used many times in productions with Bo’ness also the home to Scotland’s oldest purpose-built cinema, the Hippodome. Set in Scotland will continue to highlight incredible places within Scotland which the Falkirk area is pleased to play its important part and reach out to a different market bringing in more visitors to Scotland.”

Set in Scotland covers the last 90 years, from Alfred Hitchcock’s 1935 version of The 39 Steps, in which UNESCO World Heritage Site, The Forth Bridge, appears, to The Road Dance, which was filmed on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides during the pandemic and released in May this year. Alien, Avengers, Batman, Fast &amp; Furious, and James Bond, are among the global film franchises to have come to Scotland.

As part of the redesign, the guide labels each film by genre, features QR codes with links to film themed content on visitscotland.com, and contains a new section, Monarchs of the Glens, which focuses on those films linked to Scotland’s kings and queens, from Shakespeare’s Macbeth to the Oscar-winning The Queen.

For more on screen tourism and to download Set in Scotland:www.visitscotland.com/film

ENDS

Screen Scotland report: https://www.screen.scot/funding-and-support/research/economic-value-of-screen-sector-in-scotland-in-2019 

VisitScotland research on screen tourism: The influence of film, TV and literature on tourism - Research | VisitScotland.org

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Blockbuster film location guide launched

Acting legend James Cosmo launches VisitScotland new-look guide to big screen locations

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