Movies Set in Rome You’re all set. Airplane ticket, hotel, and transportation are booked. You sit on your couch, sipping on your favorite Italian wine, starting the countdown to your trip to Rome. Now it’s the perfect time to turn on your TV and play some of the best movies set in Rome. To get in the right vacation mood, here’s a list of movies (and Tv series!) we recommend you watch before you land in Rome. They’re all set in the Eternal City (or use some of the most famous Roman locations), so they’re definitely worth watching! #1 Movies Set in Rome: Roman Holiday – 1953 Believe me, you don't want to miss this oldie. Roman Holiday is one of the most romantic comedies produced in the 50’s. If your dream date is the one of riding a Vespa scooter with your significant other, through enchanted streets of Rome and around stunning Roman monuments, then this is the movie for you. The locations chosen for this film are superb; furthermore, we find the idea of seeing an “older” Rome really charming. In fact, all the transportation means in the movie are much smaller than what we’re used to today. Watch this movie if you want to see a princess and a journalist fall in love and go on brief but intense adventures! #2 Movies Set in Rome: La Dolce Vita – 1960 La Dolce Vita. A movie that needs no introduction: a classic known worldwide. A product of director Federico Fellini, the film can be considered the “container” of several episodes within itself. Although most of the film was shot in Rome's Cinecittà Studios, iconic locations such as the Trevi Fountain, where the female protagonist takes a swim in there. We recommend this movie not only because it’s one
Movies Set in Rome You’re all set. Airplane ticket, hotel, and transportation are booked. You sit on your couch, sipping on your favorite Italian wine, starting the countdown to your trip to Rome. Now it’s the perfect time to turn on your TV and play some of the best movies set in Rome. To get
The best preserved castle in Rome From its first construction (in 139 A.D) to today, Castel Sant’Angelo (Castle of the Holy Angel) has been a fortress and a prison, a place of miraculous appearances but also the papal residence and the headquarters of very important departments (such as the Secret Archive, which was miraculously saved from attacks and sieges), during the centuries where the Church exercised its spiritual and temporal power. But for those who love the opera, it is also the place of Tosca’s tragic ending; she seeks death throwing herself from the walkway because she cannot survive the love of her life. Today, Castel Sant’Angelo is one of the most visited monuments in Rome, and it owes its charm, as well to the place where it stands, to the magic aura that seems to come out of its stones, carved centuries ago by the artisans for whom Rome was well known outside the Vatican’s and Italy’s borders. One of the aspects attracting thousands of tourists and students every day is the “Passetto” (“Passage”) that connects the site to the Vatican Palaces; over the centuries, lots of legends were born around it, such as the ones about Pope Alexander VI (Pope Borgia or Borja, according to the original Spanish writing) who used it when he wanted to leave, for a few hours, the sacredness of Saint Peter’s holy rooms. In fact many Popes, throughout ages used this castle as their hiding place, a fortress or summer residence. The castle is like a huge layer cake or a slice of archaeological lasagna if you will, the lower half was built in the second century AD by the emperor Hadrian to be his family tomb, and the upper half was added by different Popes at different times. Castel Sant'Angelo or the
The best preserved castle in Rome From its first construction (in 139 A.D) to today, Castel Sant’Angelo (Castle of the Holy Angel) has been a fortress and a prison, a place of miraculous appearances but also the papal residence and the headquarters of very important departments (such as the Secret Archive, which was miraculously saved