The Go Betweeners
The beautiful Rosamund Pike is such a talented comedic British actress that somehow channelling Lady Elspeth Catton she even makes naming a gravestone font “Times New Roman” sound hilarious. If you’ve heard that the film Saltburn is Brideshead Revisited on a high, The Go Between on a low or The Shining somewhere in between, think again. Writer Director Emerald Fennell’s dazzling genius is to create her own genre of thriller-comedy-romance-drama-gorefest while breaking taboos you didn’t even know existed. And then to line up la crème de la crème of British acting (Rosamund, Carey Mulligan and co) and emerging Irish talent (Barrie Keoghan and Allison Oliver). Only Emerald could musically bookend to perfection a film using Handel’s Zadok the Priest and Sophie Ellis Bextor’s Murder on the Dancefloor – from majestic hauteur to killer moves.
Daughter of the jewellery and silverware designer Theo Fennell, she confides, “I love my name. I think it’s all the things perhaps that I am which is unironic, unsubtle and slightly over the top!” True to form, Saltburn is unironic, unsubtle and, begging to differ, wildly over the top. Emerald goes forth, “I don’t think irony is helpful because it’s a lie, it’s double talk. Things do not have to be all done in the same way. You can be earnest, you can earnestly love things, you can be unsubtle, you can be overwrought, you can be melodramatic and gothic, you can be all those things. In terms of dramatic narratives, you’re looking to find the thing that gets inside you in a way that’s truly sexy and disturbing.”
Saltburn’s a period film set mainly way back in ye olde days of 2007 when everybody smoked indoors and got wings downing Red Bull and eyebrow piercings were à la mode. The opening scenes are all about antics in an Oxford college before things really hot up at the voluminous country house of Saltburn. Emerald chose Drayton House next to the picturesque village of Lowick in Northamptonshire to be Saltburn. She wanted somewhere that wasn’t well known or on the tourist trail. Drayton House is all that and more – it never was and never will be open to the public. The cast and crew spent a full summer here; then the six metre high wrought iron gates were locked for good. Artistic integrity is secured by shooting every Saltburn scene at Drayton. This avoids the visual confusion of Julian Fellowes’ Gosford Park film flitting between the exterior of Luton Hoo (Bedfordshire), the reception rooms of Wrotham Park (Hertfordshire), the bedrooms of Syon House (London) and a film studio kitchen at Shepperton Studios, London.




























“A lot of people get lost in Saltburn,” warns Duncan the butler. The characters get lost in the mansion, lost in the maze, lost in the madness, but never in translation. There are references within references in the dialogue. Saltburn heir Felix Catton (played by Australian Jacob Elordi who delivers another masterful triumph of capturing the upper class English accent), nonchalantly boasts, “Evelyn Waugh’s characters are based on my family actually. Yeah, he was completely obsessed with our house.” Turns out Brideshead was really based on Saltburn not Castle Howard in Yorkshire! His father Sir James Catton amusingly played by Richard E Grant organises a house party and listing names of the invitees complains, “Stopford Sackville has cried off.” The Stopford Sackvilles are the owners of Drayton House.
To say Saltburn is beautifully shot is to say a Gainsborough portrait is well lit or Grinling Gibbons knew a thing or two about framing. The symmetry of reflection is just one technique used to great effect, whether a candlelit dinner table or moonlit pond. Those Caravaggio like stills. Shooting on squarish four by three aspect ratio film captures the height of the architecture and interiors. The closeted cloistered class obsessed quad of the Oxford college followed by the country house courtyard emphasises the exclusivity of this upper echelon world. There’s symmetry in the writing too: Felix takes his guest Oliver Quick (Barry Keoghan accelerating from mellow to moody to murderous) on an introductory whirlwind tour of the house starting in the great hall. At the end of the film Oliver will dance the same route sans vêtements in reverse, ending in the great hall. What could possibly go wrong in such gorgeous surroundings? The clue is in the script notes, “It’s all beautiful but it’s about to get messy, fast.”
Drayton House was the cover girl of the March / April 1987 edition of Traditional Interior Decoration, a seriously seminal well written fabulously photographed short lived much missed magazine. The cover money shot of the swirling staircase was accompanied by a 14 page spread salivating over the ravishing rooms. “The grey stone Elizabethan east wall of Drayton,” writes Michael Pick, “masks the baroque façade of 1702 covering a late 13th century great hall which forms the core of the house.” The medieval hammerbeam roof of the great hall is concealed by a 17th century baroque barrel vaulted ceiling designed by William Talman, architect of Chatsworth in Derbyshire. The writer concludes, “It has never been a setting for country house parties …” Rarely has an ellipsis worked so hard or been so ominous.

42 replies on “Saltburn + Drayton House Lowick Northamptonshire”
I finally watched this over new year’s on Amazon. Bazza was great in it. A few scenes to make you blush! I love country houses though, great to see the real Saltburn House! 🌲🌲🌲
Glad you enjoyed Saltburn too. We were very pleasantly surprised as we weren’f fans of Banshees. LVB
Hello darlings 💘 I LOVE Saltburn 👋🏿👏🏿👋🏿 you’ve a great angle on it as always. I want to meet Emerald now 😍😍
Hey Kiki thanks as always for your comments. Keep Beautiful! LVB X
Great inside story
Thanks Atadehir it was a real adventure working on this piece.
Excellent review Lavender’s Blue 🤩 well spotted on the Stopford Sackville line. Clever Emerald!
She’s a really good actor too I like her in Midwife. S x
Emerald was the best Camilla in The Crown too. X
Excellent commentary and witty too!
Cheers!
Good afternoon gorgeous 🥰 this is exciting ❤️ film time on LVB
Emm not sure about Barry but did enjoy the film as a whole even if I had a few hiding behind the cushion moments 😜 A x
Hey Allison well spotted on our very unsubtle (truffle) salt grinder. There are certainly a few moments to blush over! LVB X
Część piękna! Another beautiful and well written post. You should do more films! Dużo miłości, Ola x
Hola Ola! The secret issue is we don’t like very many films hence this as a premier so to speak … LVB X
Smoking indoors those were the days! Although I’d maybe skip the Red Bull. Great fun read.
Superb piece !
Thank you Janice we do try!
It is one of the many original things about Saltburn setting the period to a recent, yet different, time.
**** I did wonder where the real house was. It’s massive! Great summary of the film.
Thank you Josephine. Drayton House is truly on an impressive scale.
I zoomed in and just realised that’s a Salt Shaker in your magazine cover photo. Oh you….. 😂😂😂
Carey Mulligan is also really funny if unrecognizable as “poor dear Pamela” moving to her little bedsit!
Best film 👍🏿
Oh wow 🤯 I keep hearing about this British movie. I do like your photographs.
I got to go to the theatre now !
Go Charlee go! Or if you have Amazon Prime in the States you can watch it for free!
Excellent summation of a great film. I thought Fennell’s lockdown release was even better, Promising Young Woman, another stellar performance by Carey Mulligan.
Deep dive. You capture the film very well.
Carey Mulligan is soooo funny. ‘Where is Liverpool??’
Super blog super piece !!
Thank you we’re glad you’re enjoying Lavender’s Blue.
What a lovely village so quintessentially English.
Lowick is picture perfect with its abundance of thatched roofs, grand church and of course village pub.
Church is Fotheringay (& village?).Have read bad reviews,but you ‘sell’ it!
The church is on a grand scale exaggerated by being on the incline of a hill on the edge of the picturesque village of Lowick. It is a lovely golden coloured stone. Some of the village buildings look “designed” as estate cottages. Earlier village hall. The Drayton Estate is a short avenue away on another side of the village. Saltburn is pretty “Marmite”!
Gotcha I can view it on Amazon Prime Video
More on Liverpool by Lady Elspeth…. They probably don’t have rehab in Liverpool. Everybody just goes to ruin I suppose.
Love seeing the house in context through you photographs Stuart. And the ‘insider’ disclosure of the house’s Sackville ownership. A perfect pairing. And who would have thought that the challenged Dominic of Inisherin would morph into a lothario with hidden lethal depths.
Thank you for your comment Anne and for your useful critique of our premiere evening, despite the arctic conditions! Emerald is a clever cookie with her ‘in-the-know’ references embedded in the script. Barry certainly has been proving his versatility – what could be next for Dublin’s rising star?
Can you tell me anything about portrait of the man on the white horse in the great hall at Drayton House?
In the final scene of Saltburn, after Oliver has left the shot, we see the statues and suit of armour representing the Catton family. Towering above them is the man on the white horse representing Oliver.
I can’t read the text of the photo you posted because it’s too blurry. Does it say the Duke Of Norfolk by John Wyck?
Hi Alastair
Thanks for your comment. Unfortunately the original photos are too large (10MB+) for web use. Traditional Interior Decoration states, “The west wall [of the Great Hall] holds a canvas depicting the 6th Duke of Norfolk, which has been attributed partially to Jan Wyck and to Lely.”
We trust that answers your question ok.
Thank you so much!
You’re welcome! Happy weekending. Lavender’s Blue