How BlueBolt delivered 138 VFX shots to recreate 1930s era in Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale

Oct 15, 2025
A black and white city street scene with vintage cars, a double-decker bus, and people holding umbrellas. Tall buildings with bright signs line the wet, reflective road, evoking a 1930s era urban atmosphere reminiscent of Downton Abbey.
BlueBolt delivered over 100 VFX shots for Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale (Credit: Courtesy of BlueBolt)

Led by VFX supervisor Henry Badgett, alongside CG supervisor Dave Cook and 2D supervisor Graham Day, BlueBolt has revealed it delivered 138 VFX shots to help recreate the vibrant 1930s pre-war era of Focus Features’ Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale.

The final Downton film follows Lady Mary (Michelle Dockery) as she makes her way through London’s high society while Lord and Lady Grantham (Hugh Bonneville and Elizabeth McGovern) oversee the Yorkshire country estate.

Working closely with DOP Ben Smithard BSC and director Simon Curtis, BlueBolt recreated a buzzing 1930s Piccadilly Circus for the opening sequence, building a full CG environment and incorporating CG vehicles and crowd with the live-action elements, as well as combining the two filming locations of Mortlake Studios car park and Richmond Theatre for a seamless transition as the camera moves into the theatre and right through to the stage.

Henry Badgett, VFX supervisor, explained: “There were all sorts of challenges involved with this sequence. Chiefly combining the two filming locations. 

“Before shooting we had to tech-viz the camera positions to ensure a smooth transition from the blue screen set to the Richmond theatre location. The shot has a wipe designed into it when a man runs for the bus in front of camera, but it doesn’t cover the whole frame, so the remaining street was momentarily fully CG with the foreground crowd elements tracked in.

“On the day of filming on the blue screen set we only had a four-hour window between sunset and wrap, and it was pouring with rain with no improvement forecast. We had to just go ahead and film in the rain. We thought of it as a free wet-down, which we would have done anyway for the reflections of the Piccadilly lights stand-ins.”

A rainy, early 20th-century city street at night, with people holding umbrellas, vintage cars, a double-decker bus, and glowing street lamps illuminating the wet roads and historic buildings.
BlueBolt recreated a bustling 1930s London City Centre (Credit: Courtesy of BlueBolt)

Badgett continued: “It then turned out in the edit that the amount of live-action vehicles we had still looked relatively quiet for Piccadilly Circus, so adding more CG vehicles in between existing ones was a major unanticipated challenge.

“The lighting of the blue screen set was probably the single thing that did the most heavy lifting creatively – it gave us really solid reflections on the wet ground for us to match with Piccadilly adverts, but in a very forgiving way that we could add to as well.”

The BlueBolt team were also challenged with recreating elements of Royal Ascot Raceday, filmed at Rippon Racecourse, including a CG grandstand and surrounding stands as well as 2D and 3D crowd replication, adding to the jubilant atmosphere in which more of the Crawley family story unfolds.

A large crowd dressed in early 20th-century attire gathers at a racecourse grandstand, evoking a 1930s era Downton Abbey scene. The grandstand, decorated with flags and packed with spectators, is viewed from ground level across a green lawn.
BlueBolt also recreated Royal Ascot (Credit: Courtesy of BlueBolt)

Badgett added: “For the Ascot crowd we had multiple cameras shooting each set-up at the same time. Our VFX crew on set helped coordinate these passes – sticking to the general rule of having the hero pass contain the crowd nearest the camera, and then doing crowd rep until the crowd was small enough to get away with using CG crowd for the masses in the distance. DOP Ben Smithard was very helpful and patient, and gave us some excellent material to work with.

“We needed to ensure the crowd felt natural and alive – and adding parasols really helped. And although we had been told that the women at that time wouldn’t raise their arms over their heads when cheering the horses on, we ignored that for the deepest background to get a bit more movement.”

Beyond Piccadilly, BlueBolt also enhanced several 1930s London environments including a matte painting of the view over the Mall towards Buckingham Palace, adding views of South Kensington from the windows and modern clean-up in London locations.