
‘A kick in the teeth': UK film industry's horror at possible Trump tariffs
They are working at db Props, a small company based at Shepperton Studios whose handiwork – made of expanding foam, wood, or assorted odds and sods – in films and shows has ranged from weapons in Ant Man to Thor's hammer to Alan Turing's computer in The Imitation Game.
Yet for all its work on huge productions, the workshop has a shadow hanging over it, cast by Donald Trump. The US president this week sent shockwaves through the global film industry with a surprise statement that he will bring in a 100% tariff on movies 'produced in Foreign Lands'. 'WE WANT MOVIES MADE IN AMERICA, AGAIN!' he wrote on his social network.
'I'm terrified about this new Trump thing – whatever that may be,' says Dean Brooks, the owner of db Props, and a 45-year veteran of the props trade after joining at 16. 'This has been a proper kick in the teeth.'
Britain's film and video production industry employs about 99,000 people, but it punches well above the UK's economic weight globally, and has a glamour that other industries cannot match. Hollywood relies heavily on Britain to make its films and big-budget TV series such as the recent Star Wars series Andor and Tom Cruise's Mission Impossible franchise. In turn the UK relies on Hollywood for work: inward investment and co-production spend on film and high-end television in the UK reached £4.8bn in 2024, representing 86% of the total, according to the British Film Institute.
With a single post, investment into the UK industry has now become 'impossible' because of 'the trauma in the market, the uncertainty in the market', according to a senior industry executive.
'We should be bashing down the door at No 10,' the source says, calling for further UK tax breaks to show support for the industry. 'The UK government needs to do something to give the market a lift.'
Shepperton is owned by the same company as Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire, Britain's most prominent production hub. There are many more in south-east England alone: big facilities includes Shinfield in Berkshire, two facilities at Hertfordshire's Elstree, the former aircraft hangars at Cardington in Bedfordshire. Cardiff, Bristol, Belfast and Scotland all have large spaces. Proposals for new spaces in Marlow, also in Buckinghamshire, Sunderland in Tyne and Wear, and the revival of the historic Ealing Studios in west London will add even more.
'Everybody thinks that the uncertainty alone already has a chilling effect,' says Jon Wardle, the director of the National Film and Television School in Buckinghamshire, whose recent alumni credits include Wicked, Conclave and Gladiator II. The UK has offered tax relief for film production for years, making it a 'boringly, Britishly consistent' bet for US producers, he says. Trump has cast doubt over that model.
Hollywood studios can claim 25.5% tax relief on UK production expenditure, whereas there are no federal government subsidies in the US. The UK benefits from shared language and culture, up to a point, while costs in Hollywood are much higher in part because of strong unions. American film workers' unions have responded with delight at the prospect of work being forced back to California, although Wardle says he doubts they would benefit in the end if tariffs are imposed because the overall market might shrink.
'The fact that the UK has been eating the US's lunch when it comes to production for the last decade is no secret,' says one executive. Trump is 'absolutely right that the US should be more competitive', the executive adds, but has got the remedy 'horrifically wrong'.
There is still a buzz of Netflix productions at Shepperton, but the overall industry has been struggling. The 'streaming wars' delivered a huge bounty of work, as Netflix's rapid ascent and interest rates that were historically low spurred huge spending on film and TV by the US rivals Disney, Amazon and Apple, on top of a host of smaller contenders. However, that boom was ended by a surge in borrowing costs, a Hollywood writers' strike and an actors' strike, plus a darkening global economy.
'It's been so bad,' says Brooks. 'We can't handle any more storms.'
Brooks's workshop has areas for woodwork, metalwork and a 'sticky room' for forming intricate shapes in silicon moulds – plus shelves of random stuff that might be useful as a bomb fuse or a gothic door handle for the most recent Snow White film. However, he only has three people in his workshop compared with 12 three years ago, and some freelancers have decided to retrain as plumbers or carpenters.
'We're all creative people and we do enjoy it,' he adds. 'We're just not enjoying the environment.'
Governments have wanted homegrown film production for almost as long as the industry has existed. In 1927 the UK forced Americans to make a certain number of films in Britain if the country also wanted to distribute Hollywood products there. Companies built studios at Elstree, Teddington and Wembley in response, but it spawned shabby 'quota quickies' that were churned out to meet the requirements. Nevertheless, Britain's industry got past that to become a world leader.
Yet the UK faces an accelerating international race between governments keen for the glamour of film and TV jobs. Governments have given chunky tax breaks for productions in Budapest in Hungary, the Czech Republic, Australia's Gold Coast, New Zealand and across Canada. They would also face turmoil from tariffs.
The White House has given no clues – if it has any to give – of how 'tariffs' would work on film in practice: valuing services as they cross borders is tricky, as is working out how to work out when a film counts as American, or who exactly would have to pay higher taxes.
'It all looks pretty unworkable given how the international film industry is all bound up together,' says Mike Downey, a veteran producer and chairman of the European Film Academy. 'It hasn't been thought through, and it looks to me almost impossible to regulate except with a very blunt instrument.'
Yet Downey adds that signs that the US will go ahead will cause 'an initial freeze on production, while everyone works out what this means', and likely a reversal of so-called runaway productions, when a US-focused show is made abroad.
'If they go through in the worst possible case, it will be a total wipeout,' says Downey. 'There's nowhere to turn because no one ever envisaged a world where there would be no US business. The goose that laid the golden egg is ready to take off.'

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


BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
Bid to save Cwm Rhondda chapel raises enough money to buy it
A campaign to save the chapel where the hymn Cwm Rhondda was first sung has raised enough money to buy the known and Bread of Heaven, the hymn was first sung at Capel Rhondda in Hopkinstown, Rhondda Cynon Taf, just before Christmas final service, amid declining numbers at services, was in December 2024 and the Grade II listed chapel was put up for sale by the Welsh Baptist Union with a price tag of £47, - fearing it could be bought by a property developer - wanted to save it as a community space and campaigner Rhian Hopkins, who grew up in the village, said: "It's amazing." Ms Hopkins started the campaign less than two weeks ago and it has raised about £55,000 after the original target of the asking price was raised to £60,000 to cover legal and other costs."I keep thinking 'am I just having a vivid dream which I'll wake up from'," she said."This isn't just any chapel, this is the home of Cwm Rhondda, the home of Bread of Heaven. "This is a really important part of not just local heritage but Welsh heritage and potentially worldwide heritage from the response we've had." Ms Hopkins put a post on Facebook while her my sons were on holiday in France with their dad and said her campaign "snowballed"."It's been so exciting and I have worked ridiculously hard, doing 12-plus hour days on the campaign," she said."Michael Sheen retweeted the post this week but the biggest difference to the campaign was after BBC Radio 4 Today programme featured the story."I watched the crowdfunding page and it was like someone winning the jackpot on a fruit machine and the coins keep on coming out because the figures just kept on going up." With the money now raised to buy the chapel, Ms Hopkins hopes it can one day become a museum with a visitor centre. "A lot of money will also need to be spent on the chapel. There was a quote of £50,000 just to restore the vestry floor."There's also knotweed in the graveyard, it's going to take a lot of money and work." Singer and broadcaster Beverley Humphreys, who is from nearby Pontypridd, said: "This hymn, Cwm Rhondda is in our DNA as Welsh people... it's been in my heart ever since I can remember."There is so much history embedded in this wonderful hymn and it's not just about preserving something special from our past but what Rhian and the team will do is preserve something beautiful for the present and for the future."


BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
Kate Bush tribute held on 'Wuthering Heights Day'
A government minister was among dozens of women in Birmingham who took part in an event celebrating writer Emily Brontë and singer Kate Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever also raised funds for women's charities as the group joined thousands of people across the world recreating the video to Bush's 1978 song Wuthering inaugural event earlier was organised by The Heath Bookshop, in King's proceedings were opened by Home Office minister and Birmingham Yardley MP Jess Phillips. Charities set to benefit from the event include Anawim - Birmingham's Centre for Women and WE:ARE (Women's Empowerment And Recovery Educators).Shop owner Claire Dawes said it was a "great event" to put on "as the local community support the many arts events that happen here and always support charity events."The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever events have previously taken place in locations such as Sydney, Copenhagen, Berlin, Folkestone, and the first time this year the event was set to take place on moorland on Penistone Hill, not far from the famous Brontë sister's home in Haworth. Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


The Guardian
6 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Cleo Laine's support for the arts and artists
Cleo Laine (Obituary, 25 July) was not only a great performer and proselytiser for jazz, but supported the arts and artists in less public ways. When I launched The Arts Channel in 1983, she and John Dankworth became shareholders and consultants. In this role they persuaded many of the world's leading jazz artists to appear on the channel. They were also two of the judges for our young jazz players' GriffithsMonmouth In Cardiff, we had ripe blackberries in June (Letters, 25 July). I have already made blackberry vinegar and blackberry and lemon magic pudding (which is delicious with cream). There are hundreds of green blackberries still waiting to PerryDinas Powys, Vale of Glamorgan Not being a fan of spoof movies in general, I have watched only one in my life, Galaxy Quest. There was no way for me to avoid it, because it features the admirable and unforgettable Alan Rickman. I loved it, and was disappointed that it wasn't in your list (Turn the parody up to 11: the best spoof movies – ranked!, 24 July).Gerda FörsterAachen, Germany I'm disappointed that the award for the funniest joke of the Edinburgh fringe has been cancelled (Report, 22 July). That's taken all the pun out of BarnardWivenhoe, Essex Are those people who are concerned about the US vice-president, JD Vance, holidaying in the Cotswolds (Report, 26 July) experiencing a hillbilly allergy?Richard WolfeAuckland, New Zealand Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.