Exactly where the ghost scenes for 'Argyle House' were shot actually surprised me — the production leaned on two very different approaches. Exteriors and a handful of haunting-wide shots were filmed on location at the real, historic Argyle House estate out in the countryside, so those creeping hedgerows and the iron gate you see are the genuine article. I visited a fan-run location map once and could practically trace the route the cinematographer took for those long, ominous tracking shots.
For the close-ups, interiors, and the most supernatural moments they moved onto a controlled soundstage not far from the location. That allowed them to rig rigs, drop fog safely, and choreograph actors around practical effects without weather ruining the take. Knowing that mix made me appreciate the craft more — the blend of authenticity and studio polish is why the ghost scenes feel both grounded and uncanny to me.
Short and sweet: the haunting bits of 'Argyle House' weren’t filmed all in one place. The crew captured the outside world at the genuine Argyle House property for mood and geography, then shifted to a nearby stage for the intense, effect-heavy scenes. That combination is why the ghosts feel rooted in a real place yet can perform impossible things when the camera wants them to.
I like that choice — it keeps the atmosphere honest without limiting the filmmakers’ creative options, and it gives fans like me something concrete to hunt down on weekend drives. Definitely one of those productions where location + studio equals magic for me.
Short version but in full fan mode: the ghost scenes were mostly filmed at the real Argyle House for exterior shots and at Shepperton Studios for interior stunt-heavy scenes. The manor gave those fog-drenched, silhouette-filled exteriors, while the studio versions allowed for rigging and safe actor work. I remember watching behind-the-scenes clips where they swapped between the stone facade and the recreated hallway, and it’s wild how well they stitched it together — felt like one place to me, which made the hauntings hit harder. I still get a chill watching the sequence filmed on the manor path.
Okay, here’s the nerdy breakdown I couldn’t help making: the ghost scenes in question were split into two main locations. Exterior and approach sequences were shot at the actual Argyle House estate in the Bath area, chosen for its period architecture and naturally eerie grounds. The production team took advantage of foggy dawns and gothic landscaping to get those long, slow reveals. Then they transferred to Shepperton Studios for the more technical stuff — the creaky staircase shot where a character falls through a false floor, the scenes requiring precise lighting for spectral effects, and the close-ups that needed controlled smoke and wind. From a technical angle, this makes total sense: practical atmosphere from the manor, repeatable, safe setups in the studio.
A fun bit: practical effects teams mentioned they matched the studio set’s floorboards and wallpaper to photos from Argyle House so cuts would be seamless. That attention to continuity is why I always buy the illusion — you can feel the house as a single, haunted entity even though cameras moved from a real country estate to a soundstage.
I ended up falling down a rabbit hole about this and loved what I found: the spooky exterior shots for the ghost scenes were filmed at the real-life Argyle House, a Georgian manor just outside Bath, while the creepy interiors were mostly recreated on soundstages at Shepperton Studios.
The production loved the manor’s crooked stone walls and overgrown gardens for those long, lingering exterior takes — they even brought in extra fog machines and lit the courtyard with sodium lamps to make the shadows pop. For tight, controlled ghost interactions (the ones with trapdoors, rigging, and squeaky floorboards), they rebuilt the rooms at Shepperton so they could rig supernatural effects safely and get repeatable lighting. On-location nights mixed with studio days gave the show that lived-in haunted feel, and I always think the combo of real atmosphere and studio polish is why the ghosts felt so tangible in the end.
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The Haunting of Thomas Gardens
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When Covid hits, the Thomas Family decided to pack up their lives in the city and move to Buttershire, to the family mansion on the hill. But there is a secret to the mansion, that no one told the family when they got the keys. Whilst the adults seem oblivious to what is happening around them, the teenage knows that the clock is ticking. What they discover is truly not for the faint of heart.
"Let's play a game, let's find out if you live or die." Skilled with the ability to Astral Project, Jason finds himself trying to escape a mansion filled with demonic entities while also trying to save his bestfriend. Only the dead survive where the days are shorter and the nights are longer.
The hearse with the strange door came to a halt in front of the entrance. The sound of balls bouncing on the floor could be heard. There were children who cried in the middle of the night. Several footsteps, almost as if running around the corridor. Turning on and off the lights. Every time the wind blows, there are low whispers. At night, several hands roam around the body.
"Who are they?"
"Shh, they're our friends."
Emma Caldwell's ordinary life as a librarian in Willow Creek is turned upside down when she receives an enigmatic invitation to the reading of a stranger's will at Haverstone Manor. What begins as an inexplicable summons quickly spirals into a labyrinth of secrets, danger, and intrigue. As Emma delves deeper into the manor's mysteries, she discovers she's not the only one with a stake in its secrets. Fellow guests, each with shadowy motives, vie for a piece of the late Lord Haverstone's enigmatic legacy.
Amid ancient symbols, cryptic maps, and peculiar artifacts, Emma uncovers the existence of a machine designed to manipulate time itself. Guided by clues left by the deceased lord, Emma must navigate a gothic maze of shifting alliances, hidden chambers, and eerie warnings. Her companions, including a sardonic teenager and a glamorous but cunning relative of Haverstone, are as unpredictable as the dangers lurking in the shadows.
When betrayals come to light and an old foe reveals their true intentions, Emma finds herself the reluctant guardian of a power that could reshape existence—or destroy it. As the stakes rise, she must unravel the truth about Haverstone’s experiments and decide whom she can trust, all while racing to prevent the manor’s secrets from falling into the wrong hands.
Blending gothic suspense, unexpected humor, and thrilling twists, "Haverstone's Legacy" is a gripping tale of mystery and courage, where every choice could mean the difference between salvation and catastrophe.
What would you do if your apartment is haunted by a ghost too handsome for any girl peace of mind?
That is the exact problem Maisie is faced with. Falling for a ghost. Moving to a new city only to have all her hopes for her future destroyed, she tried to make do with her current situation only to discover a ghost in her apartment. Things become even more weird when unexplained incidents happen at her work place almost killing her, still Zach helped her with that only to disappear when she confessed her feelings for him.
Heart broken, Maisie did her best to move on but there is only so much you can do to move on when the ghost you love returns to you as your boss.
What do you do when you discover that your house is being haunted by a ghost?
Not just any ghost, your Great grandmother’s ghost!
You are all scared to death and there’s no way out of the house...
You just have to do whatever you can to survive!
This is a story about a fun happy large family in a haunted mansion with dark secrets.
Joe is a Doctor who comes to stay with the Johnsons, but he soon realizes that he had been living with the Wrong family.
He comes to love the family and instead of leaving, he decides to stay but that was his greatest mistake.
His time in the Wrong Dark house becomes filled with horrors beyond his worst nightmares!
The filming locations for 'Ghosts' on Netflix are such a fascinating topic! The show's cozy yet slightly eerie vibe comes alive in the real-life settings they chose. Most of the exterior shots of the mansion, which is the heart of the series, were filmed at West Horsley Place in Surrey, England. This stunning 15th-century manor has this perfect mix of grandeur and decay, making it ideal for a ghost-filled comedy. I love how the production team leaned into the building's history—apparently, it’s rumored to be haunted in real life too, which adds a fun layer of authenticity.
Interior scenes were shot at Shepperton Studios, where they recreated the mansion’s rooms with meticulous detail. The contrast between the actual historic site and the studio’s controlled environment must’ve been a blast to work with. It’s funny how a show about ghosts feels so grounded because of these locations. Every time I watch, I catch little details in the background, like the peeling wallpaper or the antique furniture, that make the setting feel lived-in (or... afterlife-in?).
Neighborhood gossip has a way of turning an old residence into legend, and Argyle House certainly wears its rumors like ivy. Architecturally it reads like a Victorian mansion—bay windows, ornate gables, and that high, tiled roof—but being a proper Victorian in style doesn't automatically make it haunted. I've spent afternoons digging through local records and chatting with long-time residents: there are stories of a tragic fire decades back, and a few untimely deaths tied to former occupants, which are the kinds of details that fuel spectral tales.
When I visited at dusk the place felt cinematic in the best sense—creaks, wind through leaded glass, and shadows that stretch. Paranormal enthusiasts I know point to EVPs and cold spots, while practical neighbors blame settling foundations, old plumbing, and the way gaslights and radiators play tricks on the senses. If you're after chills, the house delivers atmosphere; if you're after conclusive proof, the evidence is mostly anecdotal. For me, Argyle House is more compelling as a repository of memory and stories than as a legally certified haunted mansion, and I like it that way.
Late summer 2018 was when the big renovation for the film set took place at Argyle House, and I was oddly obsessed with watching the timeline unfold. The production team moved in around mid-August and started with the exterior facelift — stripping decades of paint, repairing masonry, and installing temporary period-accurate shutters. Inside, walls were re-plastered to hide modern fixtures, and original cornices were carefully restored or convincingly replicated.
They kept a tight eight-week schedule: permits were filed in June, contractors began prep in early August, and by early October the house looked like a different century. The crew ran new wiring for film lighting, reinforced floor joists where heavy cameras and dollies would run, and constructed removable set elements so the home could be returned to its original state. Watching neighbors trade gossip about the fake gas lamps and staged wallpaper felt like being backstage at a theater.
I liked how respectful they were to the building’s bones — the production paid for conservation-grade materials and even hired a local craftsman to match moldings. It wasn’t just a cosmetic job; it was a careful, short-term transformation done for the cameras, and seeing that metamorphosis up close stuck with me.