On the set of Shallow Grave in 1994, Ewan McGregor was a 22-year-old actor on the verge of his breakout. The production was lean, energetic, and marked by the beginning of one of the most influential partnerships in 90s British cinema: McGregor, director Danny Boyle, and producer Andrew Macdonald.
To play the arrogant, cynical journalist Alex Law, McGregor underwent a significant physical and stylistic shift. He swapped his natural appearance for a sharp, slightly “mod” aesthetic, slicked-back hair, dark turtlenecks, and a flamboyant, oversized overcoat. Crew members and co-stars noted that McGregor leaned heavily into the character’s wired, caustic energy. It was a stark contrast to the more romantic or period-drama roles he had touched on previously (like Lipstick on Your Collar).
The film’s success relied entirely on the chemistry between the three leads: McGregor, Christopher Eccleston (David), and Kerry Fox (Juliet). To build a believable "flatmate" rapport, the trio spent a great deal of time together off-camera. While McGregor and Fox were known for being more spontaneous, Eccleston was more Method-oriented and stayed in a darker headspace to match his character’s mental unraveling. This natural friction on set actually helped fuel the onscreen tension as the characters began to turn on one another.
Though the film is set in Edinburgh, most of the interior filming took place in a warehouse in Glasgow. The iconic, brightly colored flat was a purpose-built set. Because the budget was tight (roughly £1 million), the set was designed to be claustrophobic. McGregor often remarked on how the physical environment, the trapdoor in the floor and the attic space, dictated the frantic pace of his performance.
Danny Boyle encouraged a “high-octane” environment. He played music on set to keep the energy up, a technique that McGregor thrived on and would later become a staple of their work together on Trainspotting.
McGregor has often described Shallow Grave as the “happiest time” of his early career. He wasn’t yet a global superstar, so there was a sense of “us against the world” among the young cast and crew. “It was the first time I felt like I was part of a ‘new’ kind of filmmaking—something that wasn't just another period piece or a social realist drama,”he said on the Shallow Grave experience.”



































