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    Owner of the real-life “Saltburn” mansion distressed by fans visiting the property

     

    While the Catton family was more than happy to welcome a stranger into their home, the real-life owners of the Saltburn mansion feel differently.

    Charles Stopford Sackville, 63, who owns the Drayton House used in the psychological thriller from Emerald Fennell, told that much to his chagrin, the film’s popularity has led to an influx of tourists, influencers and movie fans trespassing on his property to make videos and take photos.

     

    The satiric thriller stars Keoghan as an Oxford scholarship student who befriends popular aristocrat Felix Catton (Jacob Elordi), eventually accepting an invitation to stay at his family’s estate, Saltburn, for a summer. What follows is trangessive commentary on wealth, class, and desire. Of the film, Sackville said, “There were bits that I liked and bits that I wouldn’t necessarily have put in myself. But it’s not my film, it’s Emerald’s film.”

    Interest in the sprawling 700-year-old estate has been significantly bolstered thanks to TikTok. One influencer, Rhian Williams, shared directions to the public footpath leading to the mansion but told the BBC that had no idea it would gain such traction.

    Many fans have reportedly strayed off the public footpath, leading the wonders to enlist security to patrol around the house. The property is not open to the public, so visitors cannot enter.

    While these visitations are in contention for the weirdest thing to come out of the film’s popularity, one can only hope fans never discover the location of the graveyard — lest they attempt a more frightening reenactment.