Mission Impossible III
Featured Rome locations in the movie are St. Peter's Basilica, St. Peter's Square, the Vatican Museums, and even the Necropolis, and the Tiber River. They actually filmed almost all of the interior and exterior Vatican City shots at the Royal Palace of Caserta, Italy instead of the real Vatican, including blowing up the car. Filmmakers did a great job of making their scenes appear to be the real Vatican. Some of the outdoor shots were taken in Rome, but most of it was doubled in Caserta. If you've been to the real Vatican, you would know that the walls look slightly different than they do in the movie, although it is an impressive double.
Vatican City
Vatican City is the smallest country in the world. Nestled inside the city of Rome, this country is .17 square miles but has its own police force and government. It is the spiritual headquarters of the Catholic Church. Inside Vatican City you can visit the Vatican Museums, including seeing the famous Sistine Chapel, and you can visit St. Peter's Basilica. I very highly recommend doing a tour of the Necropolis under St. Peter's Basilica. This tour takes you under St. Peter's Basilica and includes seeing what is believed to be a box containing St. Peter's bones. The tour ends up in St. Peter's Basilica, so it means skipping the very long line to get inside the Basilica. You can buy tickets for the Necropolis tour here:
Scavi Tour Tickets - Official Site
The tickets for this tour are only 13 euro from this site. Do not buy tickets from a tour company such as Viator -- we've done that before, it is NOT worth the money, and you end up paying a lot more money to take the tour with the official Scavi tour guides that you would have had when buying from the official site. You have to buy the official Scavi tour tickets in advance because only 250 visitors are allowed per day and each group only contains about 12 people. This is worth planning ahead! It is my favorite experience when visiting the Vatican! I have done the Necropolis tour three times so far, and will do again when I return to Rome.
The google maps location of Vatican City is here: Vatican City
The Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel are also very worth seeing. You will need your passport along with your ticket to be allowed into the Vatican Museum. Have your passport out and ready when you reach the front of the line. You cannot take photos or video inside the Sistine Chapel. The museums take quite a long time to tour and you probably won't be able to see everything. It is just too big! Admission tickets cost 20 euros for the museums and collections. The official site to purchase tickets is here:
Vatican Museum Tickets
It is not as easy to get to the Vatican as it is to reach many other destinations in Rome. There is not a metro stop right next to Vatican City. The Ottaviano-S metro stop is about a five minute walk from the Vatican. It was under construction when we visited the Vatican in 2024, so we had a much longer walk, but it was open after renovations when I returned in 2025. You can study the Rome metro maps here to determine the closest open metro stop when visiting the Vatican:
Rome Metro Maps
Photos are not allowed on the Necropolis tour, so I am not able to share any photos of the Necropolis, or of the Sistine Chapel. But here are many more photos of St. Peter's Square and the Vatican museums from my trips to Rome & Vatican City:
Vatican Museums
The Vatican Museum entrance is not at the same place as the entrance for St. Peter's Basilica or St. Peter's Square. This is what the museum entrance looks like:
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| The hallways of the Vatican museum are decorated in every possible place, including the ceilings |
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| There is an unbelievable amount of detail |
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| As you can see, it was also wall-to-wall people inside the museums |
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| Mary and Child Jesus stained glass inside the Vatican museums |
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| Lions of Nectanebo |
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| The Bramante staircase is visible on the left in this photo - use this large winding staircase as you enter or exit the Vatican museums. |
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| Bramante Staircase |
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| Also known as Momo's Double Helix Staircase |
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| The Helicoidal Ramp, with Peter's Boat at the base of it. |
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| view of "Peter's Boat" |
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| Apollo Belvedere |
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| Statue of Hercules in Bronze |
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| The Vatican Museum Mummy (there are actually 9 mummies in the Vatican museums) |
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| The Jennings Dog Sculpture |
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| view out the window at the parking lot |
St. Peter's Basilica
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| The Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica, which is only opened during Jubilee Years. We visited in 2025, a Jubilee Year, so we were able to walk through the Holy Door. |
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| Inside St Peter's Basilica, the beautiful sculpture by Michelangelo, the Pieta, which is probably his most famous sculpture of a religious subject. He carved it when he was 24 years old and it is the only sculpture that he ever signed. The Virgin Mary looks down sweetly at the lifeless body of her son Jesus Christ. |
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| Altar of St. Sebastian, tomb of St. Paul II |
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| This painting, by Domenichino, represents St. Sebastian's martyrdom |
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| The Vestibule Dome of the Baptism Chapel in St Peter's Basilica |
The streets stretch all around the tall Vatican City walls. Vatican Museums and St Peter's Square have two separate entrances. It takes about 15 minutes to walk between the two entrances, so know which one you are heading to before you start walking! Viale Vaticano is the entrance to the museums, and Via Della Conciliazione is the entrance for St. Peter's Square.

Lines for the museums are very long, so be sure to purchase your skip-the-line tickets at the official Vatican Museum website listed above.
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| This is where people line up to enter the Vatican museums. Purchase skip-the-line tickets at the official Vatican site and usually you will walk right through the line in a matter of minutes. |
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