Amazing James Bond locales in real life: travel like 007

Exotic locations from across the globe are a staple of any Bond film. Here’s where to find some amazing sights around the world as seen on screen.

After a delay of more than a year and a half, the world premiere of “No Time to Die” finally took place. The next installment in the franchise will be the 25th Bond film and the fifth and final starring Daniel Craig as the British secret agent. 

Like every Bond since 1962’s Dr. No, No Time to Die spans the globe, showing viewers not just London, but also far-flung locations like Italy, Jamaica, Norway and Scotland. It’s enough to give you the serious travel bug, even if you can’t afford the luxury hotels someone on a government payroll seems to be able to manage. 

From Russia With Love

Istanbul

Hagia Sophia
Keep in mind the Hagia Sophia was built almost 1,500 years ago

The ancient city at the mouth of the Bosporus is as much a character in the second Bond installment as Bond or snarling henchman Donald Grant. Sean Connery traverses many of the city’s top tourist sights like the Grand Bazaar and the Hagia Sophia, where one of the film’s pivotal scenes — he gets the plans for the Soviet embassy from Tatiana Romanova — takes place. Completed in 537, the Hagia Sophia served as an Eastern Orthodox cathedral when the city was called Constantinople and was the capital of the Byzantine Empire. After the Ottoman Empire conquered Constantinople in 1453, it became a mosque and gained minarets. Now a museum, it has an immense scale that’s as dazzling and as impressive as the Parthenon or the Colosseum. Walk in, stand under the 183-foot dome and just take it in. Yeah, there are exhibits to read, but just gawking is fine.

The Basilica Cistern
The Basilica Cistern

Your next stop is nearby at the Basilica Cistern, where Bond and MI6 station chief Kerim Bey embark on a boat to sneak under the Soviet Consulate (sadly, the periscope they used to observe the consulate’s secret meeting was movie fiction). Built in the fifth century, the cistern has a massive scale — 453 feet long by 213 feet high — and can hold 2.8 million cubic feet of water. The 30-foot-high ceiling is supported by 336 marble columns, two of which have bases with the face of Medusa. The Basilica Cistern can feel like a bit of a tourist trap, but it’s still pretty cool.

You only visit twice: Later Bond films to show Istanbul (not Constantinople) include The World is not Enough and Skyfall (more on that film below), but in both cases it gets less screen time.

On Her Majesty’s Secret Service

Schilthorn

The 9,744-foot peak in the Bernese Alps is featured in “On Her Majesty’s Secret Service”, and it’s the best villain’s lair in the series — yes, even better than the hollowed-out volcano with the monorail in You Only Live Twice. I mean … how can you not love a place with tremendous Alpine views that’s accessible only by an aerial tramway or a helicopter? In choosing Piz Gloria, Spectre’s Ernst Stavro Blofeld moved up in the world.

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Piz Gloria isn’t shy about its Bond connection. 

The complex was still under construction when the film’s location scouts discovered it in 1968. As it roughly matched Blofeld’s Piz Gloria hideout described in the book, the producers financed its completion. Now a revolving restaurant named Piz Gloria (of course), the building looks much as it did in the film for which it served as the allergy clinic where Blofeld was making a bioweapon. You can have a meal in the restaurant and browse the museum with memorabilia from the filming. Down the mountain are the towns of Grindelwald, where Bond and his soon-to-be bride, Tracy di Vicenzo, escaped terrifying henchwoman Fraulein Bunt and Blofeld’s orange-clad assassins, and Lauterbrunnen, the site of the stock car race.

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A view to die for inside Piz Gloria (and if you count what happened in the movie, I mean that literally).

For Your Eyes Only

Corfu

My favorite Roger Moore film spends much of its time in one of my favorite countries, Greece. We start in Corfu, where Bond meets up with Melina Havelock to find Britain’s lost submarine communication system before it’s captured by the KGB. An island in the Ionian Sea off Albania, Corfu is a world away from the stereotypical Greek islands of Santorini and Mykonos. While those Aegean Sea islands are rocky and barren, Corfu is so lush it reminded me of Hawaii.

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This clocktower in Corfu Town is seen when Bond arrives on the island. The town looks more like Italy than stereotypical Greece.

There are a ton of locations to explore, beginning with Corfu Town where Bond and Havelock go shopping after he arrives. Forget whitewashed buildings with blue roofs, the town’s buildings and winding streets show influences from the island’s onetime Venetian and British rulers. Have an expensive coffee around Spianáda (the town’s main square) and sample the local kumquat liqueur. Corfu also is one of the best places in Greece to experience the magical celebrations for Greek Easter.

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The Vlacherna Monastery is one of the island’s most scenic sights.

South of Corfu Town is one sight you can’t miss. The tiny Vlacherna Monastery, which sits on an islet off the Kanóni Peninsula in a brilliantly deep blue bay, is shown multiple times in the film. The monastery is usually closed, but walk over anyway on a narrow causeway that’s right under the final approach to Corfu’s airport — heaven for aviation geeks like myself. Then take in the only-in-Corfu view by hiking up to the Kanóni Cafe for a Greek salad (one of the world’s perfect foods) and a bottle of Assyrtiko wine.

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Bond casually kicks Locque’s car off a cliff at the Old Fortress. 

Meteora

This is where Bond battles with villain Aristotle Kristatos and foils the KGB’s plans. Trust me, Meteora is one of the most striking places you’ll ever visit, making it far worth the four-hour drive from Athens (or the three-hour trek from Thessaloniki). Rising above the town of Kalambaka are immense monolithic pillars and giant boulders that border the Pindos Mountains in northern Greece. Sitting atop the ridges are six Orthodox monasteries, the oldest of which was built in the 13th century. Though all are active monasteries, they admit tourists for a small fee. 

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The Monastery of The Holy Trinity has a spectacular setting.

Bus tours from Kalambaka are available, but it’s best if you rent a car and explore the monasteries on your own — a paved circular road connects all six. Though each is worth a visit, Bond fans shouldn’t miss the Monastery of The Holy Trinity, which played the part of the abandoned St. Cyril’s in the film. Unfortunately, you don’t have to be winched up in a basket to visit —  instead, you climb a staircase cut into the cliff — but the setting is spectacular. As the monks wouldn’t permit the film crews inside, interior shots were done on a soundstage. The real thing is better, in any case. You’ll see some rich frescos before walking the grounds to take in the jaw-dropping view of the valley below.

A View to a Kill

San Francisco

Yeah, A View to a Kill wasn’t the best Bond film, but it had at least three awesome things: airships, Grace Jones and Duran Duran. You also go inside San Francisco’s City Hall, where *cough* California State Geologist Stacey Sutton had her office. It’s also the building that villain Max Zorin and henchwoman Mayday set ablaze to cover up their murder of Stacey’s boss. And that’s a shame, because it’s one of the most beautiful government buildings in the US. OK, maybe I’m a little biased because I was married there, but the Beaux-Arts interior is stunning. And it’s all crowned by a magnificent 307-foot high dome that’s taller than the US capitol. 

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San Francisco’s City Hall makes paying your tax bill a little less painful. 

Completed in 1915, the building replaced a city hall that was destroyed in the 1906 earthquake. Guided tours are available, but you can also wander on your own. Stand under the rotunda, poke into the small exhibits in the Light Courts and walk up the grand staircase that leads to the wood-paneled chamber of the Board of Supervisors. Also take a moment to remember gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk taking his seat in 1977 as the first out elected official in California and his assassination in the building a year later. 

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Walk across the Golden Gate Bridge, but beware of white blimps.

While you’re in town, enjoy a bracing walk across the awesome Golden Gate Bridge where Zorin and his cool, but not very practical, getaway blimp met their end in the film’s climax.

GoldenEye

St. Petersburg

I’ve always been fascinated by Nicholas II, the last Russian tsar and his family, so I was excited to visit St. Petersburg on a cruise 14 years ago. Founded in 1703 by Tsar Peter the Great as Imperial Russia’s “Window on the West,” it served as Russia’s capital until the Communist Revolution in 1917. Renamed Leningrad in 1924 (after a few years as Petrograd), it resumed its original name in 1991. Spread over a series of islands where the Neva River empties into the Gulf of Finland, St. Petersburg has a stunningly beautiful setting with a treasure of baroque, neoclassical and art nouveau buildings in bright colors that feel more Mediterranean than Baltic. 

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The view of Palace Square from a window of the Hermitage. 

Though some of the St. Petersburg scenes were filmed in the UK, GoldenEye did shoot on location. Just before Pierce Brosnan’s Bond arrives in town, we see brief glimpses of the Hermitage (formerly the Winter Palace and now one of the world’s great museums) and the grand Palace Square (or Dvortsovaya Ploshchad) and St. Isaac’s Cathedral. And of course, the oh-so-believable tank chase takes place in the city’s streets and along its canals. If you visit, the list of must-see sights in St. Petersburg is endless. But among them are the Church of the Savior on the Spilled Blood, the Nevsky Prospekt, the Peter and Paul Fortress and the Peterhof Palace with its elaborate gardens and fountains. In Tsarskoe Selo, after you see the Catherine Palace, don’t miss the Alexander Palace , where Nicholas II and his family lived before they were exiled and executed. 

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The Peterhof Palace was the summer home of the Tsars.

Casino Royale

Venice

The first Daniel Craig film takes us to a world of thrilling locations: the Czech Republic (which stood in for Montenegro), the Bahamas, Venice and Italy’s Lake Como. Of course, Venice is always worth a visit. Locations seen in Casino Royale include the Grand Canal, Campo San Barnaba (also a filming location for Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade) and the outrageously ritzy Cipriani Hotel. 

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There’s no place like Venice.

You only visit twice: The final scene in From Russia With Love (where Bond kills villain Rosa Klebb before she can kick him with her switchblade-tipped shoes) also was shot in Venice, as were parts of Moonraker including the absurd bit with Bond driving a gondola-turned-hovercraft through St. Mark’s Square. 

St. Mark's Square
If you visit St. Mark’s Square, leave your gondola hovercraft at home.

Lake Como

After Venice, travel 150 miles west to the shore of Lake Como in the foothills of the Alps. Like Venice, this is a place with a deserved grand reputation. Indeed, the green hills spilling down into the brilliant lake are as beautiful as you expect. In the film, Bond recovers from his shipboard torture at Villa del Balbianello near the town of Lenno. You can tour the villa’s sumptuous interior, but the highlight is the opulent gardens that border the lake. This is also where Anakin Skywalker marries Padmé Amidala in Star Wars: Episode II: Attack of the Clones. So go ahead, take your travel companion and hold them like you did by the lake on Naboo.

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Villa del Balbianello: a place for rest and weddings.

Skyfall

London

Every Bond movie passes through glorious London for at least a brief visit, usually to M’s office to get his mission briefing. Skyfall, though, gives us a grand tour of the British capital as Bond rushes to protect M from assassin Raoul Silva. We get glimpses of popular sights like the Palace of Westminster, Whitehall and Smithfield Market before paying a visit to M’s terrace house. Though it’s not named on screen, she naturally resides in Knightsbridge, a posh neighborhood in West London where you’ll find the Harrods (skip it) and Harvey Nichols (visit) department stores and the Victoria and Albert Museum (absolutely visit). 

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The MI6 headquarters in London makes its presence felt.

The rooftop swimming pool where Bond takes a dip in Shanghai is actually across London at the Virgin Active Club in Canary Wharf (the Shanghai backdrop was added digitally). Packed with glass skyscrapers, shopping malls and luxury flats, Canary Wharf looks like more New York than old streets of Covent Garden. Then hop on the Docklands Light Railway to the Island Gardens stop on the Isle of Dogs (sadly, it’s not what you might think) and walk through the 118-year-old Greenwich foot tunnel under the River Thames. Check out the awesome interiors of the Old Royal Naval College (where M attends the funeral of the victims killed in the attack on MI6 headquarters) before hopping one of the Thames Clippers boats to return to central London. You’re in the world’s greatest city so enjoy yourself.

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The Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich with the towers of Canary Wharf beyond.

Glen Coe

Wildly gorgeous Glen Coe is the setting for Bond’s ancestral Scottish home, where he takes M to (unsuccessfully) hide out from Silva. Though the driving scenes when the pair first arrived in Scotland were shot here, Skyfall Lodge was a temporary set built near Elstead, Surrey, about an hour’s drive southwest of London. The scene where they stop the car to take in the view was shot in Glen Etive, a short drive from Glen Coe. 

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Straight from Central Casting, a scene of the Scottish Highlands.

A long valley (or glen) carved by an ice age glacier from an ancient volcano, Glen Coe is a postcard picture of the amazing Highlands. Craggy hills draped with mist line a green valley floor threaded by the crystal River Coe. Don’t complain if the weather is blustery as it’s all part of the experience (I’ve heard it can be sunny, but this is Scotland so don’t count on it). Drive the length of the valley stopping at the viewpoints along the way to absorb the stark, moody setting and the waterfalls tumbling down the cliffs. The Visitor Centre at the western end gives a great overview of the area’s natural and human history, including the 1692 Glencoe Massacre.

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