
My Oxford Year: inside the filming locations behind the Netflix's latest romcom
What is My Oxford Year about?
Based on Julia Whelan's novel of the same name, My Oxford Year is a new romance with an old-school flair, the kind of love story that is built on flirting over Tennyson and crying over Sylvia Plath. Sofia Carson stars as ambitious American Anna, a self-made girl who is already smart enough for a Goldman Sachs job waiting for her.
But because banking isn't as romantic as poetry, the romcom ships Anna off to the dreaming spires of Oxford, where signs up for year studying literature. Once there, she crosses paths with the extravagantly wealthy Jamie (Corey Mylchreest), a charming local who also happens to be her professor (don't worry, he's a twentysomething professor).
Where was My Oxford Year filmed?
It doesn't take an Oxford-level genius to guess the film's main setting. As Anna and Jamie's love blossoms, audiences embark on a scenic journey through Oxford's hallways and libraries with some brief detours to Windsor, London and beyond.
For Londoner Mylchreest, My Oxford Year is a nostalgic reminder of his uni days when he frequently visited the cathedral city to visit a friend studying there. Carson deliberately avoided visiting Oxford before filming to evoke a genuine first-time reaction. These are all the locations where the duo acted out this life-changing Oxford year.
Magdalen College, Oxford
The crown gem of the University of Oxford, Magdalen College features prominently throughout the Netflix film. This is where Anna attends most of her classes, dwarfed by the campus's central tower, a gothic landmark of the city.
As the camera pans out to the lawns and surrounding buildings, the campus also presents an eye-pleasing fusion of other architectural styles, from the Palladian-style 'New Building' to Neo-Gothic quadrangles like St Swithun's Quad and Longwall Quad. It's easy to see how the college's grandeur might have inspired alumni like Oscar Wilde and our humble protagonists.
Bodleian Library and Duke Humfrey's Library, Oxford
Early on in My Oxford Year, Anna confesses that a long-standing 'library fetish' lay behind her dreams of studying in Oxford. Naturally, then, the Bodleian Library is on her travel checklist. It's one of the oldest libraries in Europe, dating back to 1602, and the second largest in the UK, after London's British Library.
But being the Oxford native that he is, Jamie woos Anna by guiding her through the varnished 15th-century shelves of Duke Humfrey's Library, the Bodleian's oldest reading room. Anna's inner library nerd is awakened when Jamie leads her to a first edition copy by American poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, a move that makes Anna gasp. They also share their first kiss on the library grounds.
King Neptune Fish and Chip Shop, Windsor
The royal town of Windsor also features on the locations. It's at an unassuming chippy in the town that Jamie and Anna meet for the first time. Anna struggles to differentiate between haddock and cod as she places her order, while Jamie appears to be a cocky lad in his silver Aston Martin.
Radcliffe Square, Oxford
Oxford's cobbled square comes alive at night as Anna and Jamie have a wholesome rendezvous that ends at a kebab truck. Jamie assures Anna that trying out a doner is a quintessentially British experience, and sure enough, the initially skeptical Anna is wowed by her first kebab. Radcliffe Square is a portal to a medieval past, attracting tourists and film crews alike. Recent films shot at the square include Wonka, Tolkien, and Saltburn.
Clarendon Building, Oxford
In the heart of the city lies Clarendon Building, an 18 th century neoclassical edifice that backdrops several scenes in the movie. Look out for Anna walking past it as she rushes into neighbouring spots like the Bodleian Library and Sheldonian Theatre.
Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford
No film set in Oxford is complete without the semi-circular, Roman-style theatre where all university students set foot into to graduate. From hosting recitals and lectures to annual graduation ceremonies, the Sheldonian Theatre is inseparable from the legacy of Oxford.
The film features the Sheldonian's painted ceilings and gilded boxes as the university chancellor invites a new batch to step up, reminding them that they might forget their Oxford friends and the parties, but not their Oxford education.
Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford
Showcasing the anthropological collections of the University of Oxford, Pitt Rivers Museum is famous for its vast displays of human skulls, shrunken heads and masks that stare into your soul. The museum has often faced questions around the ethics of displaying remains and ritualistic items from across the globe.
However, My Oxford Year takes a light-hearted approach as the museum is where Anna discusses her love life with her friends. Her snarky classmate Charlie (Harry Trevaldwyn) hilariously points at a mask collection, asking which of these eyebrow-raising faces resembles his exes. Cue a montage of the museum's collection of Japanese Noh (a dance-drama) masks.
Hammersmith Bridge, London
A longstanding tradition for Oxford and Cambridge students has been the annual boating race, an aquatic standoff that passes several bridges over the River Thames in London. A dramatic leg of the race plays out in the backdrop of the Hammersmith Bridge. The green-and-gold bridge has featured in many London movies, but remains closed to motor traffic since repairs began in 2019.
Rothamsted Manor, Hertfordshire
Oxford's time capsule nature means that even the students can be found living in accommodation that's easily a few centuries old. One such spot is Rothamsted Manor, a red-brick building where Anna's medical student friend Tom (Nikhil Parmar) lives. The only catch is that the manor is located in Hertfordshire county and not Oxford.
Knebworth House, Hertfordshire
My Oxford Year features a 750 th anniversary ball (or 'septicentennial and 50 ball', as Jamie calls it). It's a big invite-only party at Knebworth House, the grandiose Tudor stately home that now hosts open-air rock concerts and film shoots. Here, the house grounds host a vibrant carnival, complete with Ferris wheel and carousel.
Knebworth House has a rich cinematic history, doubling as Bruce Wayne's manor in Tim Burton's Batman, with its exteriors also featured in 28 Days Later and The Mummy Returns. In both The King's Speech and some episodes of The Crown, Knebworth stood in for Balmoral Castle.
Hatfield House, Hertfordshire
My Oxford Year 's connections with Tim Burton's Batman continue with Hatfield House, a lavish Hertfordshire establishment dating back to the 17 th century. Jamie drives Anna to his family's grand, Saltburn -esque estate. His familial home is a showy estate with sprawling gardens, chequered-floored galleries and armouries, and a labyrinth of a wine cellar.
Hatfield House has served as a filming location in Batman, Sherlock Holmes, Paddington, Bridgerton, The Crown, Enola Holmes, and even MasterChef Australia.
Was My Oxford Year also filmed outside England?
Brief yet pivotal moments of the film also play out further afield. The dreamy-eyed Jamie tells Anna about embarking on a classic 'Grand Tour' across Europe that includes spending a night on the gondolas of Venice, wandering around the Temple of Poseidon overlooking the Aegean Sea in Greece, and paying a visit to the red-light district in Amsterdam.
For the latter, Jamie's intentions aren't sexual, as he desires a pilgrimage to the historic and elegant Oude Kerk (Old Church), the Dutch capital's oldest structure. While this pan-European journey is just discussed earlier, My Oxford Year actually incorporates these locations for an emotional rollercoaster in the third act.
Who stars in My Oxford Year?
Sofia Carson and Corey Mylchreest lead the cast as Anna and Jamie. Breaking out with Disney's Descendants franchise, Carson is a Netflix regular with roles in originals like Carry-On, Purple Hearts, and The Life List. Mylchreest, on the other hand, played King George III in the Bridgerton spin-off Queen Charlotte.
The ensemble also includes Dougray Scott (Ever After, Mission: Impossible 2) and Catherine McCormack (28 Weeks Later, Braveheart) as Jamie's parents. Anna's ragtag bunch of classmates includes Harry Trevaldwyn (The Acolyte, How To Train Your Dragon), Esme Kingdom (Fallen), and Nikhil Parmar (The Rig, Foundation).
Is there a trailer for My Oxford Year?
Yes, and you can watch it below.
When is it streaming?
My Oxford Year is available to stream on Netflix from Friday, August 1.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
8 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘I feel equally rooted in bhangra and hyperpop, queer anthems and Sufi poetry': Pakistani star Ali Sethi on his defiant debut album
As a child, Ali Sethi was enthralled watching Sufi whirling – a religious dance – at nearby shrines in Punjab: 'There's this collective catharsis that takes place and, briefly, your caste, class, gender, appearance, they stop mattering. You have licence in an otherwise extremely hierarchical society to just express yourself.' This is something the 41-year-old Pakistani-American singer, songwriter and composer hopes to create himself. Though he's also a writer – be that his acclaimed 2009 novel, The Wish Maker, or contributions to publications such as the New Yorker – music became somewhere Sethi could be accepted, especially as a queer person growing up in Lahore. 'I think music has this shamanic function in south Asian culture,' he says, 'where things you cannot say in lay language you say in the love language of music.' Sethi's stratospheric, shiver-inducing voice dissolves cultural divides. Take Intiha, his sublime 2023 experimental album of Sufi poetry with Chilean-American musician Nicolás Jaar, or 2022's Pasoori, a bombastic raga-meets-reggaeton track which has surpassed a billion streams on YouTube Music, making it easily the biggest song to come out of Pakistan this century. When we speak, Sethi is about to release his debut solo album, Love Language, which builds on Pasoori's thundering, Technicolor global pop. Working with producers like Brockhampton's Romil Hemnani and Colombian musician Juan Ariza, it's exuberant and almost oversaturated, flecked with 00s R&B, Bollywood, drill rap, slinky flamenco, even a skit on the children's game 'akkad bakkad', all of it underlined with hallmarks of north Indian classical. Not everyone is pleased. Sethi trained under two of the greats of classical music, Ustad Saami and Farida Khanum, and his initial career was in that more traditional world; some fans yearn for 'the old Ali Sethi'. Though he's adamant about using south Asian ragas rather than western chord progressions to inform the melodies for his songs, Sethi recounts how even the esteemed Ustad Saami asked him whether his music lately is fusion or, simply, confusion. 'But I think in today's completely monstrous world, what could be a better reflection than confusion?' Sethi laughs. The work of Pakistani musicians, including Sethi, has been banned and removed from streaming services in India, where fans are forced to access the music via VPN due to escalating tensions between both countries. 'If you're looking at it from the point of view of ideologues, music is the one thing that has kept the populations of India and Pakistan deeply connected to one another,' he says. 'Every time the walls go up, the borders get re-erected but some song slips past, and there's an instant [release of] fellow feeling … this unspoken connection.' The brief outbreak of conflict between the two nations earlier this year has worsened the cultural divide. The opening track on Sethi's album was initially a duet with a well-known Bollywood singer, but a film industry body threatened that any Indian artist collaborating with a Pakistani artist would be blacklisted. The song is now censored, cut through with screams and distorted industrial textures. Sethi has also been unable to get a visa to enter India in nearly a decade. 'Ever since I started releasing music, my biggest audience has been in India, and it's the one place I've not been able to go,' he says. He wryly notes that the themes of 'forbidden love' he explores in his music are 'already in place' thanks to the travel ban. Inspired by Pakistani revolutionary poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Sethi's lyrics read like love songs, but they're layered with double-meanings about ethno-nationalism, Islamophobia, war, queerness and exile. On Bridegroom, he subverts a 13th-century qawwali sometimes sung at weddings, his untethered, gliding voice delivering coy lyrics that translate to 'don't ask about my husband'. This follows 'pretty rigorously orchestrated fake news' two years ago, falsely claiming Sethi and his partner, the Pakistani painter Salman Toor, had breached local law and married. He didn't know how to react, until the answer came in the form of this song. 'I realised the appropriate response is to troll them back with what they think of as semi-sacred music, saying, 'I refuse to give up my traditions.'' Sethi may laugh in defiance, but his words are tinged with sadness. 'These last few years have been a whirlwind, not always in the nicest ways,' he says. 'There's a lot of angst and despair, a lot of ruing the loss of a milieu, the loss of home – but also revelling in new homes, temporary shelters, finding community with other musicians in places like Los Angeles, London and New York.' He says the success of NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani is revitalising; the way he 'squares that distance between all these different communities.' Love Language, then, is Sethi's attempt at the same: a 'diary of displacement' with the accompanying tour set to be 'a variety show for the end times'. Mainly, he wants the music to be a refuge, and to capture his and his audience's multiplicities. 'I'm hoping it comes across as a work of synthesis rather than a work of assimilation,' Sethi says of his album, an attempt to make hybrid music without 'simplifying or diluting' any of its constituent parts. 'I feel equally rooted in Punjabi bhangra and hyperpop, equally conversant with queer club anthems and Sufi poetry; and, actually, I see all these connections all the time, because they dwell within me.' Love Language is out now on Zubberdust Media/The Orchard


Daily Mirror
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Netflix's Wednesday viewers make same complaint as season two makes huge change
Wednesday Addams, played by lead Jenna Ortega, is back for another year at Nevermore Academy in the second season of the Netflix show, which has returned this week The new season of Wednesday has launched on Netflix this week but not everyone is impressed. Fans have waited close to three years for more episodes and some viewers have now complained over one aspect of the TV show's return. Jenna Ortega is back in the role of Wednesday Addams for the second season, which promises a "darker and more complex" journey for the Nevermore Academy student. It's teased that she has to navigate "old adversaries" whilst "plunged" in a "new bone-chilling supernatural mystery". Wednesday debuted on the streaming platform with its first season, which consisted of eight episodes, in 2022. Today, the first part of its second season was released, featuring four episodes. Part two, which will have the remaining four episodes of the season, is due to be released next month. A number of fans have expressed disappointment over the decision to divide the season into two parts. Wednesday follows in the footsteps of various other shows like Stranger Things and You, which have also released split seasons. One fan wrote on X: "The new season of Wednesday is not even complete? @Netflix you are a joke." Another said: "Why do they always have to split it into two parts?!" A third wrote: "So we waited this long for only 4 episodes? P***take." Someone else said: "The new season of #Wednesday is split in two parts? Seriously #Netflix. This is the worst business model. One episode a week or whole season at once. Those are the only acceptable options. You'll get crap numbers for this cause people will wait to binge. Not good enough." Another fan complained: "So we had to wait 3yrs for 4 new episodes to drop of #Wednesday on @netflix I fcking hate streaming." One viewer said following the release today: "Wtf is wrong with Netflix ?? Just 4 episodes ?? Really ????" Whilst someone wrote: "Why would Netflix split up season 2 of Wednesday into two parts? Why are we constantly doing stupid unnecessary releases like I just want to go back to a sense of normalcy. I'm about to stop giving a f*** and just watch shows on NBC and CBS. I can't do this anymore." Others suggested they will wait for the entire season. One wrote: "I'm not watching Wednesday until part two come out. I hate this parts s***." Another said: "Only 4 episodes of Wednesday .... imma just wait for part 2 this ridiculous." As previously reported by Deadline, whilst speaking about splitting seasons of its shows in January, Netflix's chief content officer Bela Bajaria said that some content had been split for "reasons" such as to avoid audiences waiting too long if the pandemic or strikes affected production, whilst others are "creator-driven," including if those behind a show felt that there was a "natural emotional break". Bela added: "So there's no set way, it depends on what's best for the show." Despite the complaints over the decision to split the second season, many fans have expressed excitement over the show's return. It's included viewers sharing compliments over the four episodes included in the first part. One person wrote: "Just finished first 4 episodes of #Wednesday S02 and trust me the show had become more interesting in this season, can't wait for the next episodes." They concluded: "Totally loved it. 10/10 from my side." Another said: "These 4 episodes of #Wednesday season 2 are amazing!!" Someone else commented earlier: "A fantastic start to Season 2! September feels [too] far away." A fourth wrote: "I've watched Wednesday, can't wait for part 2 next month!" The second season has also been met with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 84% from critics following almost 50 reviews, making it Certified Fresh - a title given to the "best-reviewed" content that fulfils certain requirements. The season also has a score of 83% from audiences. By comparison, the first season has 73% from critics and 85% from fans. Part one of Wednesday's second season is available on Netflix now. Part two, featuring the remaining four episodes, is scheduled to be released on September 3.


Daily Mail
31 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Catherine Zeta-Jones, 55, brings a young family member onto the carpet for the first time, can you guess who she is?
Catherine Zeta-Jones has been stunning in hyper glamorous outfits while promoting her new season of her smash-hit series Wednesday around the world this summer. At one of her splashy events, the 55-year-old Oscar-winning actress brought along a special someone as her plus one. It was a young girl who is a member of her family. The child wore a black dress with gold sandals, glasses and her blonde hair down in curls as she beamed for the camera. It was not her daughter Carys Douglas whose father is Catherine's movie star husband Michael Douglas. Can you guess who the cute tot is? It's Catherine's 10-year-old niece Ava Zeta. Zeta-Jones has an older brother, David, and a younger brother, Lyndon; it is not known which relative Ava is linked to. The movie icon and the child were seen holding hands on July 30 at Central Hall, Westminster in London, England. Catherine looked every inch a Hollywood glamour queen in a Stephane Rolland dress with Yeprem jewelry. The Traffic star has a close bond with her young niece and has shared photos and videos of her on Instagram over the years. In 2021, she posted a cute video of Ava talking in Welsh; Catherine grew up in Wales. 'Welsh in Spain. Ava Zeta is in the house. Hours of fun. Love you Ava,' she captioned the clip. Ava even referred to Catherine as her Auntie Catherine in a video where she delivered a mock acceptance speech with Catherine's Oscar trophy. The Instagram post features Ava holding on to the Best Supporting Actress statuette, which Zeta-Jones won in 2003 for Chicago, as she thanked the people closest to her. 'Thank you so much! I would like to thank my mommy, my daddy, my nanny and my Auntie Catherine,' Ava said. 'My niece Ava Zeta with the perfect acceptance speech. So well deserved!' Zeta-Jones wrote next to the video. Zeta-Jones wed Douglas at the Plaza Hotel in New York City in 2000. They have two children: son Dylan Michael, born in August 2000, and daughter Carys Zeta, born in April 2003. Wednesday's second season will debut on Netflix on August 6 with the second part arriving on September 3. In May the silver screen goddess celebrated Carys' college graduation. Catherine shared a snap where she and Douglas were kissing Carys on both cheeks as she marked the end of her studies at Brown University in Rhode Island. Catherine captioned the picture: 'The night before graduation!!!! We are both such proud parents right now!! It's only just begun!!' The proud mom went on to share several Instagram stories including footage of their daughter in her graduation robes. Catherine and Carys also held hands for a sweet moment where they kissed each other again on the cheek. The occasion, which saw Carys obtain a degree in Film and International Relations from the prestigious Ivy League school, was also celebrated with a carrot cake. Catherine and Michael share two children together, Carys, and her brother Dylan, 24, and they are both following in the acting footsteps of their famous parents Last October Michael shared snaps with his daughter Carys as he visited her at college. Proud Michael posted a heartwarming picture on Instagram at the time, posing with his daughter against a beautiful autumn backdrop on campus. He captioned the post: 'Visiting my daughter Carys at school on a fall Sunday!,' alongside a heart emoji. Carys was quick to comment as she penned: 'I had the best time with you Dadda.' Catherine and Michael share two children together, Carys, and her brother Dylan, 24, and they are both following in the acting footsteps of their famous parents. Acting is a prominent part of Michael's family background; he is the son of legendary actor Kirk Douglas and actress Diana Dill. While Dylan has a short resume on IMDb, he still remains in the spotlight - he hosts Young American with Dylan Douglas, a 'Gen Z powered political talk show.'