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Brilliant James Bond locations
  • Visit the stunning chateau Vaux le Vicomte, 35 miles south of Paris, to see its grandeur, baroque style and well-kept gardens. In 1979 Bond film Moonraker the chateau and its grounds were used as the home of main villain Hugo Drax.

  • Several scenes for Casino Royale were shot at the luxury One&Only Ocean Club in the Bahamas. It is where Bond arrives with a water plane and drives his Ford Mondeo to the club before causing car damage in the car park. He also plays a game of poker against Alex Dimitrios in the Library, off the lobby, and seduces Dimitrios' girlfriend Solange in his sea-view villa.

  • It was mentioned in Moonraker and Goldeneye, but Buckingham Palace's appearance in the Die Another Day is probably the most famous, when Sir Gustav Graves made a showy entrance by jumping out of a plane and landing by parachute in front of the palace. We love that it was used in the London 2012 opening ceremony too, with Bond walking along a Buckingham Palace corridor with the Queen.

  • In 2012's Skyfall, Bond heads to Scotland where a chase sequence is filmed in the Highlands on the A82, near the striking Buachailie Etive Mor. The secret agent’s iconic Aston Martin DB5 even manages to get upstaged by the stunning scenery. Visiting the area? Don't miss a trek to the majestic mountain, which is one of Scotland's most photographed attractions.

  • In the latest Bond film Skyfall, Turkey's largest city Istanbul was used as a major shooting location with opening scenes shot in Sultanahmet Square, the Grand Bazaar and Spice Bazaar, as well as the Hagia Sofia. Plus it's where a rooftop motorcycle chase takes place, which ends with Bond being shot.

  • 1983 Bond film Octopussy featured luxury hotel Taj Lake Palace in Udaipur as Octopussy's floating palace. After a visit to the Taj Mahal, 007 visits the palace in Lake Pichola where its interior and exterior were used for shooting. Jag Mandir and Monsoon Palace were other places in Udaipur that appeared in the film.

  • Five-star Bedfordshire hotel Luton Hoo featured in 1999 film The World Is Not Enough when the Grinling Gibbons Room became the lair for Bond's ally Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky. It was the location for his famous quote, 'can’t you just say a hello, like a normal person?' The hotel was also a setting for 1983 film Never Say Never Again when the Capability Brown Private Dining Room on the lower ground floor was a hospital where a fight scene with Bond took place in the then-white tiled corridor.

  • Venice is incredibly busy with tourists so it can be difficult to find an authentic neighbourhood experience. But head to the energetic Cannaregio district in the north of the city and you will find a wonderful choice of osterias on the edge of the Ormesini canal.  At Al Timon bar and restaurant, popular with the city's young crowd, you can enjoy Venetian vino with a serving of Cicchetti - bar snacks of hard-boiled eggs, olives and small sandwiches. Cannaregio, Fondamenta degli Ormesini 2754

  • The breathtaking Meteora is a large complex of Eastern Orthodox monasteries built on natural sandstone pillars in central Greece. The UNESCO World Heritage site appeared in the final scene of 1981 film For Your Eyes Only when monastery Agia Triada was used as villain Kristatos' hideout.

  • Beautiful Himeji Castle is one of Japan's best-preserved castles dating back to 1333 and was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1993. The attraction in Hyogo featured in the 1967 Bond film You Only Live Twice as Tanaka's ninja training camp.

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