Italian Cinema Film Locations Guide: Where Italy's Most Famous Films Were Shot

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026. Italy is the world's most filmed country — the specific combination of the Roman ruins, the Renaissance palaces, the Mediterranean coastline, and the southern Italian landscape has made Italy the location of choice for international cinema since the first American studio moved production to Cinecittà in 1953. This guide maps the specific filming locations of the most famous Italy-set films and tells you how to visit each one.

Rome: The World's Most Filmed City

Rome has been the location of more internationally significant films than any other city in the world — the specific combination of the classical ruins, the Baroque fountains, the Renaissance palaces, and the specific Italian street culture that William Wyler (Roman Holiday, 1953), Federico Fellini (La Dolce Vita, 1960), Martin Scorsese (The Gangs of New York, 1972), Anthony Minghella (The Talented Mr Ripley, 1999), Paolo Sorrentino (La Grande Bellezza, 2013), and dozens of other directors have used as both backdrop and subject for the 21st century. The specific Rome-as-film-location legacy: Cinecittà (the studio complex built by Mussolini in 1937 — the "Hollywood on the Tiber" whose Stage 5 hosted the production of Quo Vadis, Ben-Hur, Cleopatra, and La Dolce Vita in the 1950s and 1960s, and whose contemporary stage hosted The Young Pope, Suburra, and the 2023 Ridley Scott Napoleon). The Rome location tourism: the specific circuits organized around the film locations (the Roman Holiday scooter tour; the La Dolce Vita Trevi Fountain photo; the No Time to Die Matera-filmed scenes marketed as "Bond in Rome" despite Matera being 400km from Rome) give the specific film-location tourism overlay on the standard tourist circuit.

La Dolce Vita: Fellini's Rome Locations

Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita (1960 — the specific Italian neorealism-to-art film transition, the Palme d'Or at Cannes 1960, the film that named an era and a lifestyle) was shot in the specific Rome locations that define the film's visual identity: the Fontana di Trevi (the Anita Ekberg wading scene — the most famous single scene in Italian cinema history, shot in the Trevi Fountain at night with Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg; the specific Trevi Fountain is the same structure today as in 1960, with the specific night illumination that the current lighting restoration maintains); the Via Veneto (the outdoor café scene — the specific stretch of the Via Vittorio Veneto between the Palazzo Margherita and the Café de Paris, the specific paparazzi-and-celebrity street that Fellini chose as the film's social setting and that gave the world the word "paparazzi" [from the photographer character Paparazzo]); and the Cinecittà interior sets (the party scene interiors and the beach scene were shot in the Cinecittà studios). The La Dolce Vita Rome walk: the Fontana di Trevi (15 min) → the Via del Tritone → the Via Veneto (30 min) → the Villa Borghese park (the park's specific Roman sculpture garden where Mastroianni walks in the film) — a 2-hour film-location circuit through the La Dolce Vita geography.

The Godfather: Sicily Locations

The Godfather (1972 — Francis Ford Coppola's film, the most influential crime film in cinema history) filmed its Sicily sequences in the specific locations that give the Sicily-of-the-Corleone-family its specific visual identity. The key Godfather Sicily locations: Savoca (the medieval village 10km above Taormina — the specific Bar Vitelli where Michael Corleone asks for Apollonia's hand in marriage, the specific Savoca street where the wedding party passes, the specific Sant'Alvaro church where the wedding ceremony is filmed; Savoca is still recognizable as the Godfather location, with the Bar Vitelli now running as a tourist-conscious film-location café); Forza d'Agrò (the village above Savoca — additional exterior street scenes); and Palazzo Adriano (in the Palermo province — the specific palazzo piazza used for the Corleone flashback sequences). The Savoca visit: the village is accessible from Taormina by taxi (€20 one way) or the local bus from the Santa Teresa di Riva station (30 min, €2 — the bus runs 4× daily). The specific Bar Vitelli (the Savoca bar of the film) serves the local almond granita and the lemon soda in the specific terrace above the valley that Coppola chose for the scene — the granita at the Bar Vitelli is the finest film-location experience in Sicily.

James Bond Italy: Matera, Venice, Rome, Cortina

The James Bond franchise's Italy film locations span the full Italian landscape: Matera (No Time to Die, 2021 — the Matera car chase sequence, the pursuit through the Sassi streets, the Ponte Pignolosa bridge; the specific Matera location was chosen by director Cary Joji Fukunaga for the UNESCO cave city's visual uniqueness; the specific streets of the chase [Via Bruno Buozzi] are walkable as a free No Time to Die location tour); Venice (Casino Royale, 2006 — the Grand Canal palazzo collapse sequence; the specific Venice location is the Ca' Sagredo Hotel on the Grand Canal, near the Ca' d'Oro); Rome (Spectre, 2015 — the Rome car chase, the Palazzo Marchetti party scene; the Via Giulia and the Piazza Navona area were used for the chase); and Cortina d'Ampezzo (For Your Eyes Only, 1981 — the Dolomite ski chase; and Spectre, 2015 — the avalanche sequence on the Pista Staunies). The most accessible Bond Italy experience: the Matera walking tour of the No Time to Die locations (available through the Matera tourism office at the Palazzo Lanfranchi, free map, 2-hour self-guided circuit).

The White Lotus: Taormina and Palermo

The White Lotus Season 2 (the HBO series, 2022 — the second season set in Sicily) filmed principally in two Sicily locations: Taormina (the four-star San Domenico Palace Hotel, now the Four Seasons Taormina — the specific hotel interiors and the Taormina Greek Theatre terrace; the hotel room rate starts at €900/night, but the public terrace with the Etna view can be accessed for the price of a coffee in the Terrazza bar) and Palermo (the Palazzo Gangi — the historic Palermo palazzo used for the TV disco scene, the same palazzo where Luchino Visconti filmed the ballroom sequence of Il Gattopardo in 1963). The White Lotus Sicily tourism impact: the Four Seasons San Domenico Palace in Taormina reported a 60% booking increase in the 2023 season following the White Lotus airing, with an average room rate of €1,100/night — the most dramatic single example of Italian film-location tourism affecting accommodation pricing since the Roman Holiday Vespa tour industry of the 1990s.

Italian Cinema History: Neorealism and Beyond

The Italian cinema tradition (the specific Italian contribution to international film from the Neorealism movement of 1945–1960 through the Commedia all'italiana of the 1960s to the contemporary Italian art cinema of Sorrentino, Garrone, and Martone) is the most artistically significant film tradition in Europe and the most specifically located in the Italian landscape. The Neorealism location-specific approach: the specific Italian Neorealism movement (Roberto Rossellini's Roma Città Aperta, 1945; Vittorio De Sica's Ladri di Biciclette, 1948; Luchino Visconti's La Terra Trema, 1948) established the Italian cinema tradition of shooting on location in the actual Italian streets, neighborhoods, and landscapes rather than the studio set — the specific De Sica approach of casting non-professional actors and shooting in the actual Rome streets gives the films their specific documentary-fiction ambiguity that the studio-shot American films of the same period cannot match. The specific location legacy: the Rome of Rossellini and De Sica is the same Rome of No Time to Die and The Great Beauty — the specific Baroque street, the market square, the Roman ruin in the background — a continuous 80-year Italian cinema location tradition in the same physical urban fabric.

Q&A: Italy Film Locations Questions

What is the most famous Italy film location I can visit for free?

The most famous free Italian film location: the Trevi Fountain (the La Dolce Vita Anita Ekberg scene location — free to view at any hour, though the specific night-time setting of the Fellini scene requires arrival after 22:00 when the crowd thins and the illumination gives the specific fountain-in-darkness atmosphere the film captured). The specific Trevi Fountain at 07:00 in summer (before the 9,000 daily visitors arrive) gives the fountain in the specific uncrowded condition that would have allowed the Fellini scene to be filmed without 500 tourists in the background. The second most famous free location: the Via Veneto (the La Dolce Vita paparazzi street — entirely free, accessible 24 hours, the specific Café de Paris still operating though in its current tourism-format incarnation rather than the 1960 celebrity-watching format).

Can I stay in the White Lotus hotel in Sicily?

Yes — the Four Seasons San Domenico Palace in Taormina (the White Lotus Season 2 hotel — piazza San Domenico 5, Taormina, fourseasons.com/taormina) accepts reservations at €900–2,500/night depending on room and season. The White Lotus impact on the hotel pricing has been documented: the 2023 and 2024 summer rates increased 40% over the 2021 (pre-White Lotus) equivalent. The specific White Lotus room (the specific suite used for the series filming — the hotel's publicity does not specify which rooms were used for the interior scenes) is not labeled as such; the terrace experience (the specific Greek Theatre-facing terrace with the Etna view behind, the setting for multiple White Lotus exterior scenes) is accessible to non-guests for the price of a drink at the Terrazza Belvedere bar (€15–20 for the Aperol Spritz with the view, the most cost-effective White Lotus access).

What Nobody Tells You About Italian Film Locations

The Most Important Italian Film Location Is in a Florentine Church, Not on a Rome Postcard

The specific Italian film-location pilgrimage that the cinema-aware visitor makes and the standard tourist misses: the Church of Santa Maria Novella in Florence houses the specific fresco cycle by Masaccio (the Trinity, 1427 — the first painting in Western art to use linear perspective correctly, the foundational document of the Renaissance visual system that all subsequent European painting inherits) that has been used in documentary films about the Renaissance for 80 years — not a thriller or drama location but the specific building that is simultaneously an active church, a free art gallery of the first rank, and the location of the first correctly perspectived image in European history. The cinema of ideas, as opposed to the cinema of spectacle, finds its Italian location in the Trinity fresco in the left aisle of Santa Maria Novella, free to view, visited by approximately 2% of the tourists who visit the Uffizi 500 meters away.

Il Postino: The Procida Island Location

Il Postino (1994 — Michael Radford's film, the Italian-language film that became the most internationally successful Italian film of the 1990s, the Neruda-inspired story of the Sicilian postman and the Chilean poet) was filmed primarily on the island of Procida (the small volcanic island in the Naples Gulf, 40 min by hydrofoil from Pozzuoli) rather than on the Aeolian island of Salina where the novel is set — the specific Procida location (the Marina Corricella fishing village — the stacked yellow and pink houses above the harbor that give Il Postino its specific visual palette; the terra murata citadel above the harbor; the Marina Grande ferry landing) remains the most visually intact Italian film location, unchanged since the 1994 filming. The Procida visit: the island is accessible from Naples Beverello hydrofoil (40 min, €17) or from Pozzuoli (30 min, €12); the Marina Corricella walk (the specific pastel-colored harbor from the Il Postino poster image, free, no ticket) gives the most direct engagement with the film's visual landscape. The specific Procida cultural moment: the island was the 2022 Italian Capital of Culture — the investment from the designation gave Procida the cultural infrastructure (the new Procida Cultural Centre in the Terra Murata prison, the temporary exhibitions programme) that makes the Il Postino location visit a full cultural day rather than a 2-hour film tourism circuit.

Tuscany on Film: From Room with a View to Call Me by Your Name

The Tuscany film location tradition spans 40 years of international cinema: A Room with a View (James Ivory, 1985 — the Piazza della Signoria and the Fiesole hills above Florence; the specific Fiesole garden scene; the pension on the Piazza della Signoria that serves as the Pensione Bertolini is the Hotel degli Orafi on the Piazza della Signoria, now at €350–450/night); Il Paziente Inglese / The English Patient (Anthony Minghella, 1996 — the monastery of Sant'Anna in Camprena near Pienza in the Val d'Orcia, the specific frescoed refectory; the Val d'Orcia landscape of the cypress-lined road that has become the definitive Tuscan landscape image); and Chiamami col tuo Nome / Call Me by Your Name (Luca Guadagnino, 2017 — Crema, Lombardy — the specific walled town not far from Milan, using the Crema historic center and the surrounding countryside as the setting for the 1983 summer of the film). The Call Me by Your Name Crema tourism: the town's specific piazza, the Fondazione Museo Civico, and the Villa Albergoni (the exterior of Elio's family home) have become a dedicated CMBYN pilgrimage circuit, accessible from Milan in 60 minutes.

More Q&A: Italian Film Locations

Where was The Godfather filmed in Sicily?

The primary Godfather Sicily locations: Savoca (the medieval hilltop village 10km above Taormina — the Bar Vitelli wedding scene, the Sant'Alvaro church, the village streets); Forza d'Agrò (adjacent village, additional exterior scenes); and Palazzo Adriano in the Palermo province (the Corleone flashback sequences). Access: Savoca from Taormina by taxi (€20 one way) or the Giardini-Naxos coastal bus with a change at Santa Teresa di Riva (50 min total, €4). The Bar Vitelli in Savoca (the specific café of the film, now a tourist-conscious but genuinely local bar serving the typical almond granita and the lemon granita di mandorla that the Sicilian interior makes better than the coast) is open daily April–October from 09:00. The specific Godfather tourism note: Corleone (the actual Sicilian town whose name Coppola used for the fictional Corleone family) is not a filming location — the town is in the Palermo hinterland, accessible by bus, and has a museum about organized crime (the CIDMA — Centro Internazionale di Documentazione sulla Mafia) but no Godfather connection beyond the borrowed name.

Paolo Sorrentino's Italy: The Great Beauty Locations

La Grande Bellezza (The Great Beauty, Paolo Sorrentino, 2013 — the Palme d'Or winner and Best Foreign Film Oscar, the most celebrated Italian film of the 21st century) uses Rome as its primary location with the specific Sorrentino visual approach of the most beautiful Roman spaces used at their most empty and most lit: the Terrazza Gianicolo (the Gianicolo hilltop party scene — the terrazza above the Villa Aurelia, accessible on foot from Trastevere, the specific panoramic Rome view used for the 65th birthday party that opens the film); the Terme di Caracalla (the ancient Roman bath ruins — the specific nighttime giraffe scene shot in the Terme di Caracalla archaeological park, the giraffe walking through the Roman columns at night; the Caracalla archaeological park is open for evening visits in summer); the Villa Borghese park (multiple scenes); and the Piazza Navona at dawn (the specific deserted Navona that Sorrentino films at 05:00, the empty fountain and the closed café umbrellas giving Rome the specific emptiness that the 2 million daily tourists prevent at any later hour). The Grande Bellezza Rome tour: the Terrazza Gianicolo at sunset → the Terme di Caracalla at twilight → the Piazza Navona at 06:00 — the specific Sorrentino Rome circuit that the standard tourist circuit never accesses because it requires being in the wrong places at the wrong times.

More Q&A: Italy Film Locations

Where was No Time to Die filmed in Italy?

No Time to Die (2021 — the final Daniel Craig Bond film) filmed two Italian sequences: the Matera car chase (the pursuit through the Sassi di Matera — the UNESCO cave city in Basilicata, 5 hours from Rome by train; the specific streets used for the chase are walkable on the free Matera Sassi circuit — the Via Casalnuovo and the Piazza San Pietro Caveoso are the most recognizable Bond locations) and the Fabian laboratory interior (filmed at Gravina in Puglia, 30km west of Matera, the specific aqueduct bridge that appears in the background of the road sequence approaching the safehouse). The Matera Bond tourism impact: the 2021 Bond release gave Matera a specific tourism spike in 2022–2023, with the "No Time to Die tour" walking map (available at the Matera tourist office, Via del Corso 4, free) identifying the 12 specific filming locations in the Sassi. Matera had already received major tourism investment as the 2019 European Capital of Culture — the Bond filming is the secondary cultural moment following the ECoC designation.

What are the best Italy films to watch before visiting?

Five Italian films that give the finest visual and cultural preparation for an Italy visit: La Dolce Vita (Fellini, 1960 — Rome's soul, available on streaming; prepare for the specific Trevi Fountain and Via Veneto with the film's specific images in mind); Il Postino (Radford, 1994 — Procida island near Naples; the finest introduction to the specific southern Italian fishing village culture); La Grande Bellezza (Sorrentino, 2013 — Rome's hidden beauty, the specific palazzi and terraces and dawn piazzas that the tourist circuit misses); Cinema Paradiso (Tornatore, 1988 — Sicily's specific emotional landscape, the small town, the cinema as the window on the world); and L'America (Amelio, 1994 — the Albanian emigration to Italy in 1991, the specific Italian south seen from outside, the most honest film about southern Italian poverty and migration ever made). All five give the specific Italian cultural depth that the Wikipedia pre-trip research cannot.

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