Memorable films set in Venice
Venice has served as the romantic backdrop for the Venice Film Festival since 1932, but the city has also been a film star itself. Here's a look at some of the most memorable films shot in Venice.
A flop in Venice
With Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie in the leads, "The Tourist" was supposed to be an automatic success. But the 2010 film by German director Forian Henckel von Donnersmarck turned out to be a major flop. Critics said the actors were uninspired, the plot superficial and the director too little known in the US. Not even the Venice backdrop could rescue the film.
007 reinvents itself
"Casino Royale," Daniel Craig's debut as British spy James Bond, proved much more successful - and ushered in a new era for the 007 series in 2006. Craig portrayed Bond as a tough fighter who really didn't care whether his martini was shaken or stirred. He does have a soft spot for his lover Vesper (Eva Green), though - but she betrays him in the end.
Horror in Venice
The romantic city of Venice was also the setting for a horror classic. In 1973, Donald Sutherland played John, a church restorer whose daughter drowns in "Don't Look Now." In Venice, he and his wife meet two sisters who claim to have clairvoyant abilities. John doesn't believe them - until he starts experiencing mysterious sightings himself.
An obsession in Venice
In the 1971 film adaptation of Thomas Mann's 1911 novel "Death in Venice," a composer experiencing a crisis hopes to find inspiration in Venice. Instead he meets a good-looking young man who becomes his muse. But their relationship turns into an obsession that the composer is unable to control.
An accidental visit
After visiting the ancient Greek city of Paestum in southern Italy, Rosalba (Licia Maglietta) misses her bus. She makes the most of the situation and takes a short trip to Venice - which turns into a rather long one, even though her family is waiting for her. The light comedy, "Bread and Tulips" (2000), depicts Venice as the ideal place to break out of everyday routines.
Love, money and Shakespeare
Joseph Fiennes took the title role in the 2004 film adaption of Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice." The Venetian merchant Antonio is forced to borrow money so that he can court the young Portia, who is from a noble family. Al Pacino and Jeremy Irons co-star in the film.
City of books
Further proof that literature contributed to Venice's reputation as a film city is the 2006 German production "The Thief Lord," based on the youth book by Cornelia Funke. After the death of their mother, brothers Bo and Prosper flee to Venice to get away from their aunt and her husband. Once again, Venice becomes the backdrop for a turning point in life.