Set-Jetting 2026: Hollywood Insider Guide to Cinematic Europe Escapes
Monaci delle Terre Nere
Courtesy of Monaci delle Terre Nere
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Booking a hotel because The White Lotus made it look good was just the beginning. The expanded version of set-jetting involves volcanic wine country, an invitation-only whisky room in Edinburgh and a Slovenian cellar where the bear salami is aged by the moon.
These are the European destinations worth building a trip around — and the films to reference before and after the experience.
Sicily: For wine lovers
In 1971, Francis Ford Coppola couldn’t shoot in Corleone — it looked too modern. He moved east, to the hillside villages of Savoca and Forza d’Agro near Taormina, and accidentally gave Sicily a cinematic identity that has never worn off. Bar Vitelli, where Pacino’s Michael Corleone first saw Apollonia, still serves granita under the same vine-covered terrace. The Church of San Nicolo, where they married, still stands at the end of the same cliffside street. “White Lotus” Season 2 doubled down on Taormina and introduced the Etna wine country to a generation of viewers who hadn’t found it yet.
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On Etna’s slopes, the Benanti and Tornatore wineries produce nerello mascalese and carricante from vines rooted in volcanic soil, unlike anything else growing in Europe right now. Planeta handles the broader education, with wines that have become reference points for the whole island. The place to stay is Monaci delle Terre Nere, a former 17th-century Augustinian monastery that Guido Coffa spent years converting into a Relais & Chateaux wine estate — 62 acres of vineyards, citrus orchards and lava-stone terraces, with a kitchen that lives and dies by what the farm produces that morning. Before leaving the area, lunch or dinner at Anciovi, the poolside seafood restaurant at San Domenico Palace — the Four Seasons where The White Lotus was actually filmed — is mandatory.
Venice: For art lovers
Steven Spielberg used Venice well in “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989) — the Grand Canal boat chase and Campo San Barnaba doubling as a library. The city hasn’t changed its approach since. In 2026, the Venice Biennale brings the global art world back to the one city that has been staging this kind of thing since before the concept existed. The Giardini pavilions and Arsenale are the serious work — formally ambitious and often politically uncomfortable. The collateral exhibitions in palazzos and deconsecrated churches across all six sestieri are where the best discoveries happen.
The St. Regis Venice on the Grand Canal near the Accademia Bridge handles the city’s logistical complexity without making a fuss about it — the butler service is ideal to simplify every need in a city where nothing is simple. Dinner at Airelles Venezia at the new ABC Kitchen is an absolute must.
Slovenia: For food lovers
AS Boutique Hotel, courtesy of AS Boutique Hotel
Ljubljana is small, walkable and layered — a castle on the hill, a covered market by the river, an architectural confidence that punches well above the city’s size. Jaz by Ana Ros, which opened in 2023 inside the AS Boutique Hotel on Copova ulica, is the meal worth planning around. “JAZ” is Slovenian for “I” — this is Ros unencumbered by the pressure of Hisa Franko, her three-Michelin-star destination restaurant in the Soca Valley. No tasting menus. Shared plates. A menu that changes daily based on what came in from the Ljubljana market that morning and what Ros felt like cooking.
The AS Boutique Hotel has 30 rooms designed by Ofis Architects with views to the castle. The essential excursion is to the Ribnica Valley, 45 minutes south, where David Lesar runs BioSing out of an underground cellar. Lesar cures bear, deer and pork into salamis aged according to lunar phases in clay-lined chambers — no additives, no industrial shortcuts, nothing that didn’t exist in 1492 when the Ribnica Valley first started trading. Ros serves the products at Hisa Franko. The tasting in Lesar’s cellar, paired with wines from his 10,000-bottle private collection, is one of the more theatrical food experiences available anywhere in Europe.
Puglia: For Agritourism lovers
“No Time to Die” (2021) used the ravine city of Gravina in Puglia for one of its action sequences. The