
Suspension of disbelief is fun and all that, but you do know that those iconic Tatooine scenes in Star Wars weren’t really filmed in a galaxy far far away. It’s not just Star Wars. Many of our most beloved films were shot in deserts all around the world. Here are some of them.
1. Sossusvlei

Found in Namibia’s Namib-Naukluft National Park, this desert is a dry lake of salt and clay. Full of huge, rust red dunes, stands of skeletal trees and colorful sand flats of nearly otherworldly beauty, Sossusvlei has been the backdrop of a bunch of films and videos, including the 2000 movie The Cell.
2. Monument Valley

If you’re a fan of the great director John Ford, you’ve seen Monument Valley in his films. This majestic desert is famous for its breathtaking buttes and arches beneath a huge, cobalt blue sky. These features give films and TV shows of far lesser quality than The Searchers a touch of grandeur.
3. Salar de Uyuni

Like areas of Sossusvlei, Salar de Uyuni is a salt flat. Stand on this desert on a hot clear day, and see salt crystallized into six sided forms to the distant mountains. Filmmakers find such a location irresistible, and you won’t be surprised to know that it stood in for the planet Crait in The Last Jedi.
4. White Sands National Park

The undulating dunes of this desert get their white color from gypsum and can grow to 60 feet tall and 30 feet deep. Like so many desert locales, White Sands was the setting for a slew of westerns. You’ll recognize this glorious landscape in such films as Hang ‘Em High and Young Guns II. The David Bowie flick The Man Who Fell to Earth was also filmed here as was Denzel’s The Book of Eli.
5. Wadi Rum, or “Valley of the Moon”

If you didn’t know any better, you’d think this desert, found where Jordan meets Saudi Arabia, was indeed a valley on the moon. Replete with mountains whose red color comes from an abundance of iron, salt pans and sand dunes shaped and reshaped by the wind, this desert was memorialized by T.E. Lawrence. Indeed, Lawrence of Arabia, one of the greatest films ever made, was shot here in 1962.
6. Erg Chebbi

An erg is a sea of sand, and Erg Chebbi is found in the western corner of the Sahara in Morocco. The dunes here are what you think of when you think of sand dunes. They’re mountainous, red and ever shifting. Films that used Erg Chebbi as a setting include The Mummy, a number of TV shows and Prince of Persia.
7. Pinnacles Desert

Found in Western Australia, this desert is famous for the jagged limestone pillars that thrust up from its golden sands. This locale is so wonderfully weird looking that it looks like another planet. Thus, the Pinnacles was the setting for Star Trek V, Lost in Space and Battlestar Galactica among others.
8. Atacama Desert

Though deserts are thought to be hot, the Atacama can be surprisingly chilly. It’s also one of the driest places on earth and at best gets only a fraction of an inch of rain per year. The lack of crushing heat and no rain delays make the Atacama a great place for filming. Films shot here include Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets and the trailer for Season 2 of The Mandalorian.
9. Death Valley

California’s Death Valley rivals Monument Valley when it comes to films shot there. Films crews need to take care though, as Death Valley comes by its name honestly. It’s one of the hottest and driest places on earth, but it can’t be beat when it comes to a type of existential beauty. Movies shot in Death Valley include Chimmie Fadden Out West, shot in 1915, 20 Mule Team, Star Wars and Raiders of the Lost Ark.
10. Painted Desert

The Painted Desert astonishes with the reds, grays, browns, lavenders and yellows of its formations. The desert is part of the Petrified Forest, and indeed, there’s a movie called The Petrified Forest starring Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart. Another iconic film shot around the Painted Desert is Easy Rider.
11. Salinas Grandes

There are at least two salt flats called the Salinas Grandes in Argentina. The one found in the Jujuy and Salta provinces is over 11,000 feet above sea level and famous for its blinding white sand. Director Gus Van Sant loved the beautiful desolation so much that he partially filmed his movie Gerry there.
12. The Flaming Cliffs

There’s a certain type of movie director who can’t resist a place called The Flaming Cliffs, even if it’s tough to get to. These Flaming Cliffs are in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert. They get their name for the way the sun lights them up as it sets. The area is famous for its abundance of fossils, and most of its movies are documentaries, including Mountains of the Gobi.
13. Rub’ al Khali

This desert full of undulating sand dunes, salt flats and ssnd flats called sabkha is also called the Empty Quarter. A huge space, Yemen, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Oman all claim a part of it. Where else would you film the planet of Arrakis in Dune 1 and 2, or the planet Jakku in The Force Awakens?
14. Bisti Badlands

Also called the Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness, this desert is one of the more extra-terrestrial looking places on earth. Rock formations crop up like gigantic, fossilized mushrooms, and rock beds amaze with their swirling colors of purple, brown, white and green and patterns that look like your nervous system. It’s a challenging place to film, and the most famous movie shot here was William Friedkin’s Sorcerer. It was also used in the background for a Star Wars fan film.
15. Chott el Djerid

The name of this Tunisian salt lake means “Lagoon of the Land of Palms,” even though hellish temperatures dry it up in summer. If the place looks familiar, it is. It’s where a good number of the Star Wars movies were filmed. The Lars homestead set is still there.