The Gondola in Great International Movies

Giacomo Berto • May 7, 2026

There’s one thing that never stops being impressive: seeing a gondola appear on the big screen.


In Venice, it’s quite common to come across a film set. You might find a bridge closed for a few

hours, a gondola lit by huge spotlights, or a film crew working at dawn along an empty canal. Then, months later, you see everything again at the cinema and think: “I walk there all the time.”

The gondola works so well in films because it does something very rare: with just one shot, you

instantly know where you are. No other boat in the world has such a recognizable image.

A few movies come to mind. In The Tourist, starring Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie, Venice

becomes almost exaggeratedly elegant: hotels on the Grand Canal, reflections at night, gondola arrivals in front of palaces. Everything is designed to create the most cinematic Venice possible. And it works.

In Casino Royale, the atmosphere changes completely. Daniel Craig moves through Venice with

chases and dramatic scenes on the Grand Canal. The gondola appears in a version that is both ironic and spectacular. The city suddenly feels fast, tense, and full of movement.

Then there’s Pane e Tulipani, which remains one of the most beautiful films set in Venice because it doesn’t try to turn the city into an unreachable fantasy. Venice feels more real, quieter, almost everyday. Even the gondola seems to belong naturally to the city’s normal life, not only to visitors.

It’s easy to understand why cinema keeps returning here: Venice changes completely depending on how it is told. It can be mysterious, romantic, elegant, or even surreal. But the gondola always manages to stay at the center of the scene.

And it’s funny how the opposite can happen too: you take a gondola ride, enter a narrow canal, pass under a bridge, or suddenly reach the Grand Canal… and for a second, it feels as if you’ve stepped inside a movie.

If you want to discover more about the history and details of the Venetian gondola, you can visit the Gondola Gallery in Campo San Gallo.

And then do what almost everyone imagines at some point when arriving in Venice: step on board for real. Because between reflections on the water, palaces slowly passing by, and the silence of the canals, the feeling is that of becoming the protagonist of the most beautiful movie ever set in Venice: your own.

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