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Places you’ve probably visited that feature in blockbuster films

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Greenwich Village

Greenwich Village, otherwise known as The Village, is a neighbourhood on the west side of Lower Manhattan in New York City.

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South Bank

Located on the edge of the River Thames, it's a famous landscape home to world-class arts venues likes the Southbank Centre, the National Theatre

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Times Square

Time Square is another famous New York location that draws in an estimated 50 million visitors annually - so chances are, at least one person reading this has ventured to see

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Salzburg

Famed for being the birthplace of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and the shooting location of the 1965 Julie Andrews-led film, The Sound of Music

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Piccadilly Circus

Travellers come from all over the world to check out the bright neon signs, cinemas, theatres, shops and restaurants, all of which are quintessentially British but world famous.

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Trafalgar Square

There seems to be a theme here. In that some of London's biggest tourist attractions have found themselves wrapped up in major movies.

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Petra

In 1985, the Petra Archaeological Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site, and in 2007 it was officially named as one of the new seven wonders of the world.

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The Atelier des Lumières

According to the official website, the Atelier des Lumières in Paris was a 'former steel foundry created in 1835,' but was transformed into a digital centre in 2018

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