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| Where Was ‘Ladies First’ Filmed? Every Stunning Shooting Location Behind Netflix’s 2026 Comedy Film. (Credits: Netflix) |
Netflix’s ‘Ladies First’ may be packed with chaotic workplace battles, sharp satire, and Sacha Baron Cohen causing problems in every room he walks into, but audiences quickly became distracted by something else entirely — the filming locations. Between stylish office interiors, ridiculously polished London streets, countryside scenery that looks suspiciously too peaceful for modern life, and elegant neighbourhoods screaming “someone here definitely owns three expensive coffee machines,” the film has turned into unexpected travel inspiration for viewers already plotting future UK holidays.
Directed by Thea Sharrock, the 2026 comedy flips gender power dynamics upside down through the story of Damien Sachs, a wealthy advertising executive whose ego is roughly the size of central London. After waking up in a parallel world run socially and professionally by women, Damien suddenly finds himself struggling under the leadership of the ruthless and brilliantly composed Alex Fox, played by Rosamund Pike. While the performances and satire carry the story, the carefully selected filming locations quietly do half the work in building the movie’s strange, polished world.
Production reportedly took place entirely across England between November 2024 and January 2025. Several filming spots were intentionally kept under wraps during shooting to stop crowds and overexcited fans from interrupting scenes. Fair enough really. Nothing destroys a carefully crafted emotional moment faster than someone shouting “WE LOVE YOU ROSAMUND” from behind a parked van.
A huge portion of the movie was filmed in Surrey, which became the central production base for the Netflix project. The county has long been a favourite for film productions because it can transform into almost anything directors need without forcing crews into total logistical chaos.
Surrey offers elegant suburban areas, countryside landscapes, wealthy-looking business districts, and enough green scenery to make Londoners briefly consider moving there before checking property prices.
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| Netflix |
One of the most important filming hubs for ‘Ladies First’ was Shepperton Studios in Surrey. The iconic studio complex has hosted legendary productions for decades, including romantic comedy classics like ‘Love Actually,’ ‘Notting Hill,’ and ‘Bridget Jones’s Diary.’ Honestly, British romantic chaos practically lives there full-time at this point.
For ‘Ladies First,’ the studio reportedly handled many of the film’s office interiors and large-scale controlled sequences. The pristine corporate spaces where Damien’s confidence slowly collapses were largely created within Shepperton’s massive sound stages, giving the film its slick, stylised atmosphere.
The surrounding areas of Spelthorne also appear throughout the movie, particularly in transitional scenes involving Damien’s luxury lifestyle before his world flips upside down.
Quiet residential roads, modern office parks, and riverside stretches around the district help create the polished upper-class image the film constantly mocks. It is basically the perfect setting for someone who thinks buying expensive shoes counts as a personality trait.
Parts of Guildford in Surrey were also used heavily during production. The historic town’s blend of old English architecture and modern commercial spaces gave the film a clean but slightly theatrical visual tone.
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| Netflix |
Several café scenes and exterior corporate sequences reportedly used locations around Guildford High Street and the riverside walk areas. The contrast between traditional British scenery and the film’s exaggerated modern gender politics somehow works absurdly well.
Meanwhile, London naturally became another major backdrop for the movie. The capital’s endless mix of wealthy districts, business hubs, and cinematic streets gave the production exactly the sort of visual texture needed for Damien’s increasingly uncomfortable journey through a world no longer designed around his ego.
One of the most noticeable filming areas was Hampstead in North West London. Production crews were spotted filming on Nassington Road during December 2024, and the area’s elegant Victorian homes and leafy streets appear throughout several quieter scenes in the film.
Hampstead has that specific London energy where every third house looks like it belongs to either an artist, a millionaire, or someone who definitely says “summering abroad” with complete seriousness.
Additional filming also took place around Primrose Hill, which helped establish some of the movie’s more stylish urban sequences.
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| Netflix |
The area’s boutique-lined streets, pastel-coloured townhouses, and polished café culture fit perfectly into the satirical tone of the story. It gives the film that very specific “everyone here somehow looks expensive while carrying reusable shopping bags” atmosphere.
The production reportedly also utilised parts of Canary Wharf for exterior business scenes. The towering glass buildings and ultra-modern corporate environment created a sharp contrast against the older London neighbourhoods shown elsewhere in the film.
Several scenes involving workplace power struggles and public confrontations appear to use plazas and financial district walkways around the area. Nothing says “professional humiliation” quite like arguing beside enormous reflective skyscrapers while office workers pretend not to stare.
Outside London, the film expanded further into Cambridgeshire, particularly around Duxford Airfield near the Imperial War Museum. The location was reportedly used for larger logistical sequences and commercial-style set pieces.
The massive open spaces and industrial structures gave certain scenes a broader cinematic scale compared to the tighter London settings. Duxford’s cinematic appeal has quietly made it a favourite for productions wanting dramatic visuals without needing full CGI overload every five minutes.
Several sequences also appear to have been filmed in Boarhunt, Hampshire, where the countryside landscapes added softer visual moments throughout the story. Rolling greenery, isolated roads, and peaceful village surroundings helped balance the sharper urban satire elsewhere in the film.
The contrast works beautifully because Damien, a man clearly built for expensive restaurants and self-importance, suddenly looks hilariously out of place standing in calm English countryside scenery.
The production also moved through parts of Richmond and Kingston upon Thames, where riverside streets and upscale retail districts appear briefly in shopping and social scenes. These locations add a polished but approachable atmosphere to the film, helping the world feel grounded despite the exaggerated social reversal at the centre of the story.
Another important production base was reportedly established in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, where additional studio work took place for large interior builds.
The area has long been connected to major British film and television productions, and the controlled environment allowed the crew to build detailed office spaces and stylised environments central to the movie’s alternate society. Quite a fitting place really for a film built entirely around making one arrogant man profoundly uncomfortable for two hours straight.
Fans online have reacted strongly to the filming locations, especially after recognising famous London neighbourhoods hidden inside the movie’s satirical world. Some viewers admitted they became distracted trying to identify shooting spots instead of following Damien’s increasingly disastrous decisions.
Others praised the production for making familiar English locations feel oddly fresh again without turning the entire film into one giant tourism advert disguised as cinema. There has also been growing interest from international viewers planning UK trips around the movie’s locations.
Hampstead, Shepperton, and Surrey in particular have seen rising online searches connected to the film since its release. Social media reactions have ranged from people obsessing over the architecture to viewers joking that they mainly want to visit the cafés where Rosamund Pike delivers devastating insults with terrifying calmness.
What makes the filming locations in ‘Ladies First’ stand out is how naturally they support the film’s humour without overpowering it. Every polished office, wealthy neighbourhood, countryside road, and stylish London street quietly reflects Damien’s collapsing confidence while building a world that feels strangely believable despite its absurd setup. And honestly, half the fun now is spotting these places while watching the chaos unfold.
So if ‘Ladies First’ has suddenly convinced you to wander through Hampstead pretending you are in a Netflix satire while dramatically questioning modern society over overpriced coffee, you are definitely not alone.
Which filming location would you actually visit first — the elegant London streets, the countryside scenery, or the iconic Shepperton Studios world where Damien Sachs’ ego basically went to die?



