Following the production start last month, the first leaked on-set photos and footage from Amazon's live-action Tomb Raider series have emerged, featuring Sophie Turner performing stunts as Lara Croft. Captured in Surrey woods, the images build excitement amid recent cast additions for Phoebe Waller-Bridge's adaptation.
The first on-set images and video from Amazon MGM Studios' Tomb Raider series for Prime Video surfaced on February 6, 2026, via social media posts from Core Design and TMZ. Shared three weeks after principal photography began on January 15, they show Sophie Turner—known from Game of Thrones and X-Men—in full Lara Croft mode during filming in a drizzling woodland near Surrey, UK.
Turner's tactical look includes black mid-calf boots, grey cargo pants, a black vest over a ribbed brown long-sleeve shirt, and the signature green canvas knapsack with brown leather straps. She's equipped with dual thigh-holstered pistols, a forearm brace, fingerless leather gloves, a grenade belt, and her classic braid. Footage captures her executing stunts, such as parachuting across a lake.
In a recent January interview on The Julia Cunningham Show, Turner shared her rigorous prep: “We’ve been doing eight hours a day, five days a week, since February last year of training, so it’s been a lot.” She noted challenges like a 'perpetual back problem' but progress in building muscle from scratch.
Phoebe Waller-Bridge, creator, writer, executive producer, and co-showrunner, teased: “It's not very often you get to make a show of this scale with a character you grew up loving... Get your artifacts out... Croft is coming..."
Building on earlier announcements—including Jason Isaacs as Uncle Atlas, Sigourney Weaver as Evelyn Wallis, Martin Bobb-Semple as Zip, and Bill Paterson as Winston—recent castings add Celia Imrie as Francine (British Museum Head of Advancement) and speculation around Keeley Hawes as Lara's mother Amelia after her London set sighting. The series from Crystal Dynamics and Amazon eyes a 2027 Prime Video debut, continuing the 30-year Tomb Raider legacy with over 100 million units sold.