Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice

REVIEW · VENICE

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice

  • 4.610 reviews
  • From $169.93
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Operated by 5 SCHEI DE MONA Concierge Service Venice · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.6 (10)Price from$169.93Operated by5 SCHEI DE MONA Concierge Service VeniceBook viaGetYourGuide

Venice turns cinematic on foot. This private Spider-man-themed walking tour helps you frame the city through the exact spots used in movies, while you also get hands-on coaching for photos and video. I especially like the way the route centers on real, popular Venice icons like Rialto Bridge and Saint Mark Square, and I also like the interactive games and quizzes that keep it fun for adults and kids. One watch-out: it’s an open-air walk, and the organizer may cancel if weather turns rainy.

You start at Ponte di la Becarie in the Rialto Fish Market area and end right back where you met your host. You’re with a small private group (up to 3), and you can choose from start times depending on availability, with the tour lasting about 2.5 to 5 hours. Host or greeter language is English or Italian, and the experience is guided by the 5 SCHEI DE MONA Concierge Service Venice team.

Key highlights you’ll care about

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Key highlights you’ll care about

  • Spider-man perspective photo plan across Venice’s best-known streets and landmarks
  • Rialto Bridge and Saint Mark Square included, with photo/video targets in mind
  • Movie-location storytelling tied to multiple films: The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, Indiana Jones, and more
  • Interactive quiz + games during the walk, so you’re not just standing and listening
  • You get the files: original photos/videos plus 5 edited photos and 1 short 2–3 minute video
  • Private group up to 3, so the pacing can work for your group

Why a Spider-man + movie-locations walk works in Venice

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Why a Spider-man + movie-locations walk works in Venice
Venice can feel like a maze until someone helps you connect the dots. This tour does that by giving you a clear reason to look up, step sideways, and aim your camera at specific angles. Instead of wandering randomly, you move with purpose: canals, calli (small lanes), and famous squares all become part of a movie-location hunt.

I like that it’s not only Spider-man. You’ll hear about subjects connected to several productions filmed in Venice, including The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. That matters because Venice has lots of cinematic “DNA,” and the best way to appreciate it is to see how the city’s textures show up again and again on screen.

The other thing I really value is the photo-and-video focus. You’re walking through iconic Venice, yes, but you’re also actively producing content during the walk, using the host’s prompts and game-style questions. The result is that you leave with both memories and a practical photo/video record you can actually use later.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Venice.

Meeting at Ponte di la Becarie and getting your camera strategy right

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Meeting at Ponte di la Becarie and getting your camera strategy right
You meet at Ponte di la Becarie, near the Rialto Fish Market area. From there, the tour is designed as a walking circuit that stays close to the center’s most photo-friendly sights, then returns to the meeting point at the end.

Because it’s a private group and you’re sharing the streets and bridges with a host, you’ll get more than generic sightseeing advice. You’ll get an on-the-spot sense of where to stand and what to aim for. The tour includes both photos and videos, and you’ll play with your host during the walk with questions tied to Spider-man Far From Home and Venice-related topics.

Quick practical note: Venice calli are narrow and stop-and-start is normal. If you want clean video, plan on short clips, slow panning, and using steady pauses at viewpoints your host points out. The tour’s format encourages that rhythm.

Also, the host language options (English and Italian) matter if you’re the kind of person who likes to ask follow-ups. This tour is set up for that, and multiple reviews highlight how much the host communicates and adjusts what you see based on what your group wants.

Rialto Fish Market to Rialto Bridge: the film angles you can actually recreate

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Rialto Fish Market to Rialto Bridge: the film angles you can actually recreate
You’re starting in the Rialto Fish Market area, so the tour’s early energy is all about getting your bearings fast. This is also where Venice naturally supports cinematic framing: arches, water reflections, and busy textures that look great in both still photos and quick video moments.

You’ll take photos of the Rialto Bridge area, and that’s a big deal for value. Rialto is one of Venice’s most photographed landmarks, but it’s also easy to shoot the same view as everyone else. Here, you’re aiming with movie-location context, which pushes you to try different positions and angles instead of defaulting to the postcard shot.

A smart way to use this part of the tour: shoot in layers. Take one wider shot to capture the bridge and surrounding architecture, then move closer to grab details that read well even when you’re watching a small screen later (stone edges, canal curves, and bridge under-views). The tour’s photo-and-video coaching fits that workflow.

One more reason Rialto is a strong early stop: it helps you understand the tour’s overall pacing. Once you’ve moved from a landmark into smaller calli, you’ll see how the host links tight street scenes to screen scenes.

Calli, canals, and the interactive game that keeps the walk moving

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Calli, canals, and the interactive game that keeps the walk moving
The heart of this tour is the movement: canals and narrow calli with frequent photo opportunities. Venice is famous for looking photogenic from just about any angle, but the real skill is learning where your feet and your camera should go next. That’s where the host’s interactive style helps.

During the walk, you’ll hear about subjects connected to major movie locations in Venice, including Spider-man Far From Home. You’ll also get quizzes and games where your host tests your skills and knowledge. It sounds playful (because it is), but it’s also practical: it keeps you paying attention to details so you remember why a specific corner, bell-tower view, or bridge approach matters.

The tour also includes a few specific, Spider-man-related stops designed around story moments. For example, you’ll be shown:

  • where the Hotel De Matteis is
  • the shop where Spider-man buys the Black Flower
  • the bell tower that Spider-man tries not to bring down
  • the most famous bridge in Venice, which Elemental destroys (as described in the tour)

You won’t just hear names. You’ll be guided to the places, and you’ll be encouraged to take the photos that match what you learned. In a city like Venice, that pairing of story + location is what turns “I saw it” into “I can find it again.”

And if you’re bringing kids: the Venice TV & Movie Tour angle is built for them. The games and photo challenges make the city feel like a living set, not a checklist. One review also emphasized that a 14-year-old son found it interesting, which tells you the format has enough energy to cross age gaps.

Saint Mark Square: iconic, yes, but shot with a mission

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Saint Mark Square: iconic, yes, but shot with a mission
Saint Mark Square is where many Venice tours rush through. This one works differently. You’ll include Saint Mark Square as part of your photo and video goals, and the pacing gives you time to compose instead of just passing through.

Why this matters: Saint Mark Square is wide and visually intense. Without guidance, you often end up with a lot of similar photos. With a movie-locations approach, you look for sightlines and angles you might otherwise miss. You also get a clearer sense of what makes the place “cinematic” in practice: the relationship between open space, architecture, and the direction of light.

This is also where you’ll probably appreciate the private-group setup. You’re not stuck waiting for a large crowd to shuffle toward the next photo point. Your host can help your group keep momentum and still take better shots.

What you get at the end: original files, plus edited souvenirs

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - What you get at the end: original files, plus edited souvenirs
The biggest value piece here is the deliverables. This isn’t just a walk with a phone. At the end of the journey, you receive:

  • All original files of the photos and videos
  • 5 edited photos
  • 1 short video lasting about 2–3 minutes

The tour states that photos and video are taken with a Samsung S22 Ultra and then edited using professional editor software. That means your final souvenirs aren’t just raw phone snaps. You’ll have both: the originals for flexibility, and the edited set for immediate shareability.

If you care about film nostalgia, you’ll also like how the guide supports comparisons. One review highlighted still shots used to compare what you saw on the street with what appears in the films. That kind of “place-to-screen” comparison is exactly what makes a movie-location tour feel more than sightseeing.

A practical tip for you: take a few moments during the walk to mark what you want to show your friends later. If there’s a view you’re especially proud of, aim for a clean original, too. Then even if you love the edited results, you keep the option to crop or reframe from the originals.

Price and value for a private group up to 3

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Price and value for a private group up to 3
The price is $169.93 per group up to 3 people. On paper, that’s not the cheapest option. In practice, it’s easier to justify because you’re paying for a private guide plus a photo/video package that creates deliverables you wouldn’t get from a standard walking tour.

Here’s where the value shows up most:

  • Private pacing in Venice’s narrow streets (less waiting, more focused time)
  • Photo and video production support during the walk, not after
  • A real content handoff: originals plus edited outputs (photos and a short video)
  • A story-driven route tied to multiple film titles, including The Tourist and A Haunting in Venice

If you’re traveling solo, a private group tour costs more than joining a group. But you’re also getting more attention and a better chance to optimize your shots. If you’re a couple or a small family, it often feels like you’re paying for a tailored media day with a guide who knows exactly how to turn Venice into a set.

Weather, walking time, and how to prepare for 2.5 to 5 hours

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Weather, walking time, and how to prepare for 2.5 to 5 hours
This tour is open-air, and it can be canceled if rain arrives. So plan like a pro: bring a lightweight rain layer and expect Venice streets to be slippery if you get caught in a drizzle.

The duration is listed as 2.5 to 5 hours, depending on availability and the chosen start time. In other words, you’ll likely spend enough time outside to feel the walking, especially if you’re stopping often for photos and video.

A good way to make this work comfortably is to dress for frequent pauses. If you’re used to “tour mode,” switch to “camera mode.” Take breaks at the viewpoints your host identifies. Let the host do some of the decision-making while you focus on framing, timing, and capturing reflections in canals when the light cooperates.

Finally, since the route includes calli and canal crossings, your best plan is simply: wear shoes you can trust. Venice stone doesn’t forgive tired feet.

Should you book this Spider-man movie-locations photo and video tour?

Spider-Man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice - Should you book this Spider-man movie-locations photo and video tour?
Book it if you want more than a standard Venice walk. This is ideal when you care about photography, enjoy movies, and like your sightseeing to have a mission. The combination of photo/video coaching, film-location storytelling, and interactive quizzes makes it feel lively without turning chaotic.

Skip it (or think twice) if your main goal is sitting in cafés and taking in Venice slowly with minimal walking and minimal production. This tour is built for movement and output: it’s about capturing Venice through movie angles, not just absorbing the atmosphere.

If you’re traveling with a small group, I think you’ll get strong value for the money: private attention, original files, and edited souvenirs delivered from one phone shot day. And with a host named Alessandro leading the experience in English or Italian, you’re also likely to get that calm, helpful guide vibe that makes Venice feel doable instead of overwhelming.

FAQ

How long is the Spider-man, The Tourist & all Movie Locations in Venice tour?

It lasts about 2.5 to 5 hours. Starting times depend on availability.

Where does the tour meet?

It starts at Ponte di la Becarie in the Rialto Fish Market area.

Does the tour end somewhere else?

No. It ends back at the meeting point.

Is this tour private?

Yes, it’s a private group tour.

How big is the group?

The price is for a group up to 3 people.

What movies and TV locations does the tour cover?

It includes movie locations connected to Spider-man Far From Home, The Tourist, A Haunting in Venice, 007 Casino Royale, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, plus some others.

What photos and videos do I get after the tour?

You get all original photo and video files, plus 5 edited photos and 1 short edited video (about 2–3 minutes).

Are entry fees included?

No. It’s an open-air walking tour, so entry fees are not included.

What language is the host available in?

The host or greeter is available in English and Italian.

What happens in the rain?

In case of rain, the organizer may cancel the tour.

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