Where was Our Kind of Traitor filmed
Filming country: United Kingdom France Switzerland
Our Kind of Traitor was filmed in London in the United Kingdom, Paris in France, and Bern in Switzerland.
Emirates Stadium
In movie
Real
Law Courts
In movie
Real
Einstein Museum
In movie
Real
London Bridge
In movie
Real
Park
In movie
Real
Under Wharf
In movie
Real
Foreign Office
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Reform Club is a private members' club constructed in 1841 by architect Sir Charles Barry in the Italian Renaissance style. While originally founded as an all-male club and home for progressive political parties, the club was the first of its kind to begin admitting women in 1981 and has now shifted to a less political role since the decline of the Liberal Party.
London
London Heathrow Airport
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Heathrow Airport began as the small Great West Aerodrome near the small town of Heathrow to the west of London. The airport began to expand greatly in 1944 to support the war effort but was repurposed into a civil airport when the war ended. The original layout and terminals were designed by Sir Frederick Gibberd and is now one of the busiest airports in the world.
London
Petit Palais
In movie
Real
Russian Hotel (interior)
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Lancaster House is a neo-classical mansion constructed in 1825 for the Duke of York and Albany designed partially by Sir Robert Smirke before he was replaced by Benjamin Dean Wyatt. The interior wasn't completed until 1840 with the help of a third architect Sir Charles Barry. The house has become a popular stand-in for Buckingham Palace in films and TV playing that role half a dozen times.
London
Bolshoi Theatre
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Drury Lane was designed by Benjamin Dean Wyatt and opened with a production of Hamlet in 1812. It was constructed after the older theatre was lost in a fire and it is the fourth theatre to stand on its site. Originally seating over 3,000 people (down from 3,600 in the previous building), a major interior remodel in 1922 reduced capacity to just under 2,000.
London
St. Pancras Station
In movie
Real
Scene was shot St. Pancras Station was constructed by the Midland Railway in 1868 as the terminus of their only line into London. It was designed by William Henry Barlow with a single-span iron roof, the largest such roof at the time spanning 245 feet. In the early 2000s the platforms were extended with a new train shed to allow the station to accommodate the longer Eurostar trains coming in through the Chunnel. As soon as the station was complete, construction began on a hotel at the front of the station designed by architect George Gilbert Scott in a Italian gothic style with polychromatic brick materials. The hotel operated until 1935 when it was converted into offices, but it was eventually renovated and converted back into a hotel in 2011.
London
St Pancras International