Greece’s ravishing coastlines, dramatic mountainscapes and classic small villages make the perfect backdrop not just for our mundane lives but also for the on-screen hijinks of many a Hollywood blockbuster. Here, we guide you through some of the top locations from famous movies shot in Greece. Pick a few and plan your trip, tracing the footsteps of the stars.

The old port of Skiathos in the Sporades, where several scenes from Mama Mia! were shot. Image by Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet
<span class="caption">The old port of Skiathos in the Sporades, where several scenes from Mama Mia! were shot. Image by Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet</span>

Skiathos and Skopelos

Mama Mia! (2008) This Hollywood confection sees Meryl Streep romping in overalls and Amanda Seyfried tracking down her father (Pierce? Colin? Stellan?) on the islands of Skiathos and Skopelos. These diminutive beauties in the Sporades chain are blessed with some of the Aegean’s loveliest beaches, so it’s little wonder that in July and August Skiathos, especially, gets packed with sun-starved Europeans. Skiathos Town on the southeast coast perches on several hilltops and bays, while Skopelos offers a slightly more remote getaway with pine forests, vineyards, olive groves and orchards of plums and almonds.

Kefallonia

Captain Corelli’s Mandolin (2001) Nicolas Cage and Penelope Cruz lit up the screen from Kefallonia, a large, wild island in the Ionian chain. Their hit Captain Corelli’s Mandolin is based on Louis de Bernières’ novel of war and love, and takes advantage of Kefallonia’s rural splendor. The tranquil cypress- and fir-covered island is breathtakingly beautiful with untamed mountain ranges, rich vineyards, soaring coastal cliffs and golden beaches. It has not succumbed to package tourism, allowing the film’s co-stars to dine at low-key but excellent seafood tavernas such as Paradise Beach during the shoot.

Meteora’s Moni Agias Triados was a James Bond filming location. Image by Thomas Depenbusch / CC BY 2.0
<span class="caption">Meteora’s Moni Agias Triados was a James Bond filming location. <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/depenbusch/5500144898" target="_blank">Image by Thomas Depenbusch</a> / <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" target="_blank">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Meteora

For Your Eyes Only (1981) Roger Moore’s James Bond memorably dashes around the monks’ walkways at the magical stone pinnacle-topping monasteries of Meteora. While there were once magnificent late-14th-century monasteries perched dramatically atop all 24 spires, only six are still occupied. Moni Agias Triados, which was featured in the film, also has the most remote feel, and the views of the valley below are extraordinary. Inside, look for beautiful art such as the Judgement of Pilate and the Hospitality of Abraham. Parts of the film were also shot in Corfu.

Dazzling Mykonos sets the scene for Bourne Identity and Shirley Valentine. Image by Julia Maudlin / CC BY 2.0
<span class="caption">Dazzling Mykonos sets the scene for Bourne Identity and Shirley Valentine. <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/juliamaudlin/15495268826" target="_blank">Image by Julia Maudlin</a> / <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" target="_blank">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Mykonos

Shirley Valentine (1989); Bourne Identity (2002) In a study in contrasts, the classic Liverpool housewife, Shirley Valentine (Pauline Collins) gets her groove back in glittery Mykonos, as does hunky Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) when he tracks down his paramour (Franka Potente), renting scooters on a dazzling azure bay. In real life, the island – a perennial favourite for jetsetters the world over – earns its reputation with its quaint but boutique-packed old town, partying beach scene and glamorous nightlife.

Crete’s Chania port is featured in Two Faces of January. Image by Jean-Pierre Dalbera / CC BY 2.0
<span class="caption">Crete’s Chania port is featured in Two Faces of January. <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/dalbera/5744428884" target="_blank">Image by Jean-Pierre Dalbera</a> / <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" target="_blank">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Crete

Zorba the Greek (1964); Two Faces of January (2014); The Inbetweeners Movie (2011) Who can forget Anthony Quinn dancing on the beach in Zorba the Greek? That classic film (based on the Nikos Kazantzakis novel) – as well as scenes from Patricia Highsmith’s Two Faces of January, which was brought to the silver screen by Viggo Mortensen, Kirsten Dunst and Oscar Isaac – was shot in Crete, Greece’s largest, most southerly island. The popular lad flick The Inbetweeners Movie also took advantage of this rugged, independent isle, whose size, distance and free-wheeling history give it the feel of a country unto itself. With its dramatic landscape, myriad mountain villages, unique cultural identity and some of the best food in Greece, plan for plenty of time to explore.

Two Faces of January also got exceptional permission to film at the Acropolis in Athens, making for an exquisite opening sequence.

Volcanic Santorini stars in Lara Croft Tomb Raider. Image by Klearchos Kapoutsis / CC BY 2.0
<span class="caption">Volcanic Santorini stars in Lara Croft Tomb Raider. <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/klearchos/4528633341" target="_blank">Image by Klearchos Kapoutsis</a> / <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" target="_blank">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Santorini (Thira)

Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (2003); Summer Lovers (1982); The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants (2005) Angelina Jolie brings her brand of archaeological swagger to Santorini in the sweeping opening of Tomb Raider: Cradle of Life, when an underground temple is revealed during an earthquake, kicking off the action. In Summer Lovers, Darryl Hannah and Peter Gallagher’s action relied on their ménage à trois. Wonderfully volcanic Santorini also starred in The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants: this is where one of four young friends, Lena (played by Alexis Bledel), falls in star-crossed love. In reality, as in the movies, the startling sight of the submerged caldera almost encircled by sheer lava-layered cliffs – topped off by clifftop towns that look like a dusting of icing sugar – will grab your attention and never let it go.

The entrance to the port at the Unesco-listed medieval Old Town of Rhodes. Image by Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet
<span class="caption">The entrance to the port at the Unesco-listed medieval Old Town of Rhodes. Image by Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet</span>

Rhodes

The Guns of Navarone (1961) In the classic film loosely based on the novel by Alistair MacLean, superstars Gregory Peck, David Niven and Anthony Quinn form part of a cadre out to destroy a strategic German gun emplacement in Greece during WWII. The action was filmed on the famous island of Rhodes, and a bay on the southeast still sports Quinn’s name (though his efforts to buy it after filming became embattled). A pilgrimage to Rhodes’ Unesco World Heritage–listed Old Town is a must. One of the world’s finest surviving examples of medieval fortification, 12m-thick walls enclose a magnificent mesh of Byzantine, Turkish and medieval buildings, such as the imposing Palace of the Grand Masters, which was restored, but never used, as a holiday home for Mussolini.

Amorgos’ chalk-white Moni Hozoviotissis makes an appearance in The Big Blue. Image by Emmanuel Eragne / CC BY 2.0
<span class="caption">Amorgos’ chalk-white Moni Hozoviotissis makes an appearance in The Big Blue. <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/emmanueleragne/8089540046" target="_blank">Image by Emmanuel Eragne </a>/ <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" target="_blank">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Amorgos

The Big Blue (Le Grand Bleu, 1988) The one-of-a-kind Luc Besson film about daring free divers was shot in the cobalt waters off Amorgos. The slender isle lies on the far southeastern arc of the Cyclades, and its long ridge of mountains grows in stature as you approach across the sea, the high summits often wreathed in plump purple clouds. The star of the island, also seen in the film, is Moni Hozoviotissis: an extraordinary chalk-white monastery built into the base of a soaring cliff on the island’s southeast coast. Today, there’s plenty of scope for beaching, but Amorgos is much more about archaeology and the outdoor world – there’s great walking, rock climbing and, of course, scuba diving (or free diving for the bold).

Olive groves and snow-capped peaks in the Peloponnese, where Richard Linklater's Before Midnight was shot. Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet
<span class="caption">Olive groves and snow-capped peaks in the Peloponnese, where Richard Linklater's Before Midnight was shot. Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet</span>

Peloponnese

Before Midnight (2013) The last in the trilogy of intimate Richard Linklater movies starring Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy sees our protagonists sparring and soul-searching in the Mani region of the Peloponnese. Scenes from the movie jump from the Kardamyli waterfront and former home of writer Sir Patrick Leigh Fermor to the luxe Costa Navarino Hotel on the opposite shore. The Mani area is notoriously beautiful and raw, and features unusual tower settlements that were built as refuges during clan wars from the 17th century onwards. Explore the steep tumbling skirts of the Taÿgetos Mountains (threaded with wonderful walking trails) and the tiny coves and ports nestling beside, like Jesse and Céline.

The seafront windmill in Hydra featured in Sophia Loren's Boy on a Dolphin. Image by Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet
<span class="caption">The seafront windmill in Hydra featured in Sophia Loren's Boy on a Dolphin. Image by Alexis Averbuck / Lonely Planet</span>

Hydra

Phaedra (1962); Boy on a Dolphin (1957) Little Hydra in the Saronic Gulf was the setting for two tales of distinctly different but equally passionate Phaedras. Melina Merkouri starred in Phaedra, a contemporary (for 1962!) retelling of the Greek myth of Phaedra. Her doomed paramour and stepson Alexis is played by a young Tony Perkins. In Boy on a Dolphin, Sophia Loren plays Phaedra, the sponge diver who discovers and tries to capitalise on an ancient statue of a boy riding a dolphin. Her co-stars were Alan Ladd and Clifton Webb. Both movies, and the still shots of the actors relaxing in the harbour between takes, show how little Hydra has changed today. The town’s picturesque horseshoe-shaped port and gracious stone mansions remain heritage-protected, and the island is still known as a retreat for artists, writers and celebrities. Hydra allows no motorised vehicles – leading to unspoilt trails along the coast and into the mountains – but an exception was made during the filming of Phaedra, when a small sports car zipped around the pedestrianised curves.

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