REVIEW · VENICE
Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by 5 SCHEI DE MONA Concierge Service Venice · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Venice gets a superhero makeover. This private photo-and-video walking tour turns film locations into real, shootable moments, from the Rialto area to Saint Mark Square. I especially like the Spider-man perspective that keeps the route fun, and I also love that the host, Alessandro, mixes movie facts with interactive questions so you’re not just staring at buildings. One heads-up: this is an open-air walk and the organizer may cancel in rain.
You start near the Rialto Fish Market at Ponte di la Becarie, so you’re in the action from minute one. I like that it’s a private group up to 3, which means you’re not lost in a crowd when you want one more angle down a canal-side calli. You’ll also get media shot on a Samsung S22 Ultra and edited with professional software, so it’s not just “pose and hope.”
At the end, you don’t leave empty-handed. You receive all original files plus 5 edited photos and 1 short video (2–3 minutes). The photo/video deliverables are the main purpose here, so if that’s what you want from Venice, this makes a lot of sense.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth planning around
- Venice movie locations look better from street level
- Meeting at Ponte di la Becarie: where the tour starts easy
- Rialto Fish Market to Rialto Bridge: the money shot zone
- Saint Mark Square: big views with a movie-location mindset
- Spider-man scene details: Hotel De Matteis, Black Flower, bell tower moments
- Beyond Spider-man: The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, and Indiana Jones
- How the photo-and-video package actually delivers value
- Price and what $169.93 buys your group up to 3
- Walking comfort, timing, and rain reality in Venice
- Who this Spider-man Venice tour fits best
- Should you book this Spider-man Venice locations photo tour?
- FAQ
- Where does the tour start?
- How long is the tour?
- Is this tour private?
- How much does it cost?
- Which movie locations and subjects are covered?
- What photo and video deliverables are included?
- What language will the host speak?
- What happens in case of rain?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key highlights worth planning around

- Spider-man Far From Home and other movie locations on foot: you’re walking Venice while matching scenes to streets and landmarks.
- Rialto Bridge and Saint Mark Square in the same photo day: two big hitters, not just a one-zone tour.
- Alessandro runs interactive quizzes and games: questions about Spider-man Far From Home and Venice keep things moving.
- You get originals plus edited picks: 5 edited photos and 1 edited short video (2–3 minutes).
- Specific scene-style stops: like the Hotel De Matteis, the Black Flower shop, and a bell tower moment.
- Rain can cancel: since it’s open-air, you’ll want a Plan B day in Venice.
Venice movie locations look better from street level

Hollywood tends to flatten Venice into a postcard. This tour does the opposite. You walk the real calli and canal-adjacent lanes and use the movies as a “map” for where to look, not just what to see. That means you’re paying attention to details you’d normally miss: sightlines between buildings, the way a bridge frames a scene, and where crowds thin out just enough to photograph comfortably.
The best part for me is how the movie angle gives you momentum. You’re not wandering aimlessly. You know why you’re standing in a spot—because a scene is connected to it, or because there’s an anecdote tied to that location. That turns Venice sightseeing into a scavenger hunt you can actually photograph.
And the format is practical. You’re not stuck in a museum or waiting around. You’re moving, shooting, and then getting help from a guide who can steer you toward the best viewpoint.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Venice.
Meeting at Ponte di la Becarie: where the tour starts easy

Your tour begins at Ponte di la Becarie, in the Rialto Fish Market area. It’s a handy starting spot because you’re already near one of Venice’s busiest photo zones, and it keeps the early part of the walk feeling “connected” to the most iconic center.
You’ll also end back at the meeting point, which is great when you’re planning the rest of your day. In Venice, that little piece of predictability helps a lot—especially if you have reservations later.
The host or greeter is in English and Italian, and the tour is a private group, so you can ask follow-ups without feeling rushed. That matters when you’re trying to match what you remember from a movie to what you’re seeing in real life.
Rialto Fish Market to Rialto Bridge: the money shot zone

After meeting near Ponte di la Becarie, the tour focuses on the Rialto Bridge area—one of the most camera-friendly spots in Venice, and also one of the easiest places to spot movie references. Expect to wander while taking photos and videos along canals and down narrow Venetian calli.
What makes this portion valuable is the way the guide helps you think like a cinematographer. A bridge like Rialto isn’t only about the famous view. It’s also about angles: from higher up, from street level, and from the sides where buildings “frame” the bridge. With a guided photo-and-video approach, you’re more likely to capture the kind of shots you actually want to share later.
There’s also a realism factor. Venice is crowded in the center. Being guided to the right spot at the right moment can make your photos look cleaner, because you’re not just standing anywhere—you’re standing where the composition works.
If you’re coming with kids, this section also tends to be a hit. It’s visually loud and easy to get excited about, and the tour’s interactive format means you’ll likely spend more time focused on the “game” than on waiting.
Saint Mark Square: big views with a movie-location mindset

Saint Mark Square is the other anchor of the tour. You’ll take photos around the area while learning what makes these places show up in film and how Venice’s landmarks connect to the stories people watch.
The practical side: Saint Mark Square is open and wide compared to Venice’s narrow lanes, so it often feels easier for photography. The challenge is usually crowd control and timing. The tour’s walk-and-shoot structure helps because you’re not just dropping into the square and hoping for good light. You’re moving with a plan.
The movie-location mindset changes how you see it. Instead of treating Saint Mark Square as a single landmark, you start noticing how different sides and sightlines connect back to cinematic moments. That makes your photos feel more intentional—like you’re documenting a journey rather than taking random “I’m here” shots.
Also, if you’re a film fan, this is where you’ll likely get the most satisfaction from the tour’s theme. The guide links Venice sights to recognizable on-screen settings, so you’re turning memory into something you can photograph and compare later.
Spider-man scene details: Hotel De Matteis, Black Flower, bell tower moments

This tour is built around Spider-man Far From Home, and it includes some very specific scene-style stops. Even if you’re not a hardcore superhero film person, these points give you something concrete to look for, which is what makes a location tour work.
Here are a few of the standouts the tour covers:
- Where the Hotel De Matteis is (so you can match the film setting to the real address reality)
- The shop where Super-Man buys the Black Flower
- The bell tower that Spider-Man tries not to bring down
- The most famous bridge in Venice, including the connection to the bridge destroyed in Elemental
Even with no special effects involved, Venice has the right mix of textures for these kinds of scenes—aged stone, tight alley angles, and water-level reflections. The guide’s job is to connect what you remember from the film to what you’re seeing now.
I like that the tour doesn’t treat these like trivia stickers you glance at and forget. The interactive games and quiz format encourage you to pay attention. Then your photos come out more “meaningful,” because you’re capturing the exact place the story is pointing to.
Beyond Spider-man: The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, and Indiana Jones

The tour isn’t only about superheroes. You’ll also hear about Venice’s movie subjects tied to The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, plus other movie references.
Why this works well: Venice changes depending on who’s looking at it. A James Bond style “glamour view” feels different than a spooky mystery vibe, and Indiana Jones tends to push a sense of adventure and discovery. By hitting multiple genres, you’re more likely to keep your attention through the whole walk.
This is also helpful if your group has different tastes. If one person wants Spider-man locations, and another prefers the mood of 007 or the mystery tone of A Haunting in Venice, you’re not splitting up. The guide keeps turning the city into a shared reference point.
And because this is a photo-and-video tour, those genre shifts aren’t just talk. They shape what you photograph and how the route is paced—so the experience stays active rather than turning into a lecture.
How the photo-and-video package actually delivers value

This is not a “normal guide tour” with a few photos sprinkled in. Photos and videos of the journey are part of the package’s core promise. You’re effectively buying a structured walk where the filming/photography output is the deliverable.
Here’s what’s included in your media:
- All original files from the photo/video capture
- 5 edited photos
- 1 short video lasting 2–3 minutes
- Shot with a Samsung S22 Ultra mobile phone
- Edited with professional editor software
That last point is important. You’re not left with a shaky set of random clips. You get originals for completeness, plus edited pieces for the “I want this on my phone right now” side of travel.
And yes—there’s a big difference between getting instructions and getting actual help. The guide takes photos for the group and also provides shots you can compare with movie frames later. That compare-and-contrast effect is one of the reasons people end up loving this tour, because it turns Venice into a then-and-now story you can hold onto.
If you’re thinking about social media or simply want keepsakes that don’t look like accidental vacation snapshots, this setup is strong value.
Price and what $169.93 buys your group up to 3

The price is $169.93 per group for up to 3 people. In Venice, that means you’re paying for time with a private host plus tangible deliverables (original files plus edited photo/video outputs). If you’re splitting the cost among a small group, it can work out more sensibly than you’d expect compared to many “experience” tours that don’t include the media end product.
The value sweet spot is when you:
- Want movie-location context and a guided shooting plan
- Care about leaving with real media edits (not just “someone will take a photo”)
- Prefer a private pace rather than a crowded group where you can’t stop for a second angle
You’re also getting English/Italian hosting and interactive games to keep the time from feeling like a long walk with a slideshow vibe.
Walking comfort, timing, and rain reality in Venice

Expect a walking tour through Venice’s canals and narrow calli. Venice is beautiful, but it’s also uneven and unpredictable underfoot. I recommend comfortable shoes because you’ll be moving constantly and trying to frame shots while walking.
Timing is flexible: the tour is listed as 2.5 to 5 hours, and you should check availability to see starting times. That range matters because it impacts how much you can shoot and how many location “stops” you get time to enjoy.
One practical risk: rain. The organizer may cancel if weather turns. Since it’s open-air and focused on walking and filming outdoors, you’ll want to keep one lighter day in your schedule so you can switch plans if needed.
Who this Spider-man Venice tour fits best
This tour is ideal if you’re one of these:
- A film fan who likes connecting on-screen Venice to real places
- Someone who wants photos and videos as the main output, not just a bonus
- A family with kids who’ll enjoy the interactive quiz and game approach
- A couple or small group that wants a private pace and less friction in crowded areas
It’s also a good choice if your time in Venice is short. By pairing major landmarks like Rialto Bridge and Saint Mark Square with movie-location stops, you get a “greatest hits” tour with a theme that makes it feel fresh.
Should you book this Spider-man Venice locations photo tour?
I’d book it if your priority is leaving Venice with strong photo and video keepsakes tied to places you recognize from movies. The combination of private pacing, interactive host questions, and the included deliverables (original files plus edited photos and a short video) makes this feel like a real product, not just a guided walk.
I’d think twice if you’re very rain-sensitive, since the tour is open-air and cancellation can happen. I’d also reconsider if you’re not interested in media capture at all—because the whole experience is built around creating photos and videos, including the edited items you take home.
If you want Venice through a Spider-man lens, with Rialto and Saint Mark Square built into the same outing, this tour is a smart, photo-forward way to see the city.
FAQ
Where does the tour start?
It starts at Ponte di la Becarie in the Rialto Fish Market area.
How long is the tour?
The duration is listed as 2.5 to 5 hours. Starting times depend on availability.
Is this tour private?
Yes, it’s a private group.
How much does it cost?
The price is $169.93 per group for up to 3 people.
Which movie locations and subjects are covered?
The tour includes Venice locations and subjects related to Spider-man Far From Home, The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and some others.
What photo and video deliverables are included?
You receive all original files, plus 5 edited photos and 1 short video lasting 2–3 minutes.
What language will the host speak?
The host or greeter speaks English and Italian.
What happens in case of rain?
In case of rain, the organizer may cancel the tour.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






















