From the banks of the Bosphorus to the fairy chimneys of Cappadocia — the landscapes that captivated India’s biggest filmmakers are waiting for you
Long before the travel itinerary, there was the movie hall. For millions of Indian audiences, their first glimpse of Türkiye arrived not through a guidebook but through a cinema screen — a chase sequence across the rooftops of İstanbul, a song filmed against the surreal rock formations of Cappadocia, a romantic montage set against the glittering waters of the Bosphorus. Türkiye has, over two decades of Bollywood filmmaking, become one of the industry’s most beloved locations — and the country is now inviting Indian travellers to move from spectator to explorer, and discover for themselves the landscapes that have long held Bollywood’s imagination.
Türkiye’s appeal to Indian filmmakers is neither coincidental nor fleeting. The country offers something that few destinations can match: the visual variety of an entire continent compressed into a single nation. Ancient Ottoman architecture, medieval bazaars, volcanic valleys, turquoise coastlines, and a metropolis that straddles two continents — each of these has provided Bollywood directors with ready-made cinema. The result is a destination that Indian travellers already know, in the most instinctive sense, before they have set foot on Turkish soil.
İstanbul: The City That Has Played Every Part
Of all Türkiye’s cities, İstanbul has drawn Bollywood’s lens most frequently and most dramatically. The Hagia Sophia Grand Mosque, the Grand Bazaar, the Bosphorus strait, and the Maiden’s Tower have all featured in major Indian productions. Salman Khan and Katrina Kaif’s Ek Tha Tiger brought the Maiden’s Tower to mass Indian audiences; the thriller Baby used İstanbul’s streets as its high-stakes backdrop; the ensemble drama Dil Dhadakne Do shoot against the city’s waterways, with its skyline visible in the frame. Abhishek Bachchan’s Guru filmed the celebrated ‘Mayya Mayya’ sequence inside İstanbul’s Nuruosmaniye Mosque, turning a sacred Ottoman interior into one of the most visually striking song picturisation in modern Bollywood.
For the Indian traveller, a walk through İstanbul’s Historic Peninsula is, in the most literal sense, a walk through Bollywood history — the same arcades, the same water, the same architecture that the camera found.
Cappadocia: Where Bollywood Found Its Other World
Cappadocia’s landscape of volcanic fairy chimneys, cave monasteries, underground cities and hot air balloon-filled skies has made it one of Türkiye’s most recognisable locations for Indian audiences. The region’s geology — millennia of eruption and erosion producing formations found nowhere else on earth — gives it a quality that filmmakers describe as naturally cinematic. Director Ribhu Dasgupta’s action production Durga was shot across Cappadocia’s dramatic terrain, adding the region to the growing roster of Bollywood-stamped locations across the country. For travellers who have watched those landscapes on screen and felt the pull of the unfamiliar, Cappadocia delivers exactly what the camera promised.
Antalya and Bodrum: The Mediterranean Canvas
Türkiye’s southern and western coastlines have long provided Bollywood with its sun-drenched sequences. The ancient city of Perge in Antalya was used as a filming location for Race, while the Mardan Palace Hotel in the same province appeared in Ek Tha Tiger. Antalya’s combination of Roman ruins, resort infrastructure, and coastal drama makes it a natural set — and a natural destination for travellers who want to pair cultural discovery with the kind of landscape that regularly makes international cinema’s shortlist.
Beyond the Frame: Türkiye Supports Film Tourism at Every Level
Türkiye’s emergence as a premier Bollywood filming destination has been supported, in part, by a deliberate government policy to attract international film productions through infrastructure, logistical support, and location facilitation. Aamir Khan’s Laal Singh Chaddha, an adaptation of Forrest Gump, was among those confirmed for Turkish locations, with shoots planned across İstanbul, Adana, and Mount Demirkazık in Niğde.
The action film Race 2, the drama Game, and Mission Istanbul: Darr ke Aagey Jeet Hai have all filmed across Turkish cities, steadily deepening a filmography that now gives Indian travellers an extraordinary map — one plotted in scenes they have already seen, places they already feel they know.
For travellers motivated by nostalgia as much as novelty, that familiarity is the invitation. Türkiye has been on Indian screens for two decades. The country is now extending a more direct one.