Poster Night Train to Lisbon 2013

Where was Night Train to Lisbon filmed

2013, Mystery Thriller Romance
Filming country: Portugal Switzerland

Night Train to Lisbon was filmed in Portugal and Switzerland

Cemetery Prazeres

In movie

Scene where Raimond arrives at the cemetery.


Real

Scene was shot at the chapel at the Praceres Cemetery in Lisbon.
Lisbon



Praça Leandro da Silva

In movie

Scene where Raimund finds the pharmacy of Jorge.


Real

Scene was shot in an empty room of a building with red stained-glass windows in Lisbon's historic center.
Lisbon



Trafaria - Porto Brandão - Belém

In movie

Scene where Raimund and Mariana are on their way to Mariana’s uncle João Eça.


Real

Scene was shot on the water in the bay of Mar da Paglia, the one around which Lisbon is built. Behind the protagonists we see the suspension bridge "April 25th".
Lisbon



Cemetery Prazeres

In movie

Scene where Raimond arrives at the tomb of the Amadeu.


Real

Scene was shot The largest cemetery in the city, the Praceres Lisbon Cemetery, contains a huge number of crypts with graves several centuries old.
Lisbon



Kirchenfeldbrücke

In movie

Scene where Professor Raimund Gregorius is on his way to his class when he she’s a young woman trying to jump off the bridge.


Real

Scene was shot on the Kirchenfeld Bridge spanning the River Are in the Swiss city of Bern. It is a large, gray arched bridge running along the edge of the historic part of the city. It's perfect for the movie, as it's gothic and gloomy and very tall. Falling off the bridge is unequivocally fatal.
Bern



Santa Apolónia train station

In movie

Scene where Raimund is ready to leave Lisbon.


Real

Scene was shot Santa Apolonia is one of Lisbon’s main train stations and the primary departure station for all international rail routes. The station is to the east of the city centre and is positioned on a stretch of flat land between the Tejo estuary and the hills of the Alfama district. Santa Apolonia is the oldest train station in Lisbon, being constructed in 1865, and was initially envisaged as grand terminus connecting European rail services with cruise liners heading across the Atlantic to the Americas.
Lisbon




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