Explore Iconic Star Wars Filming Locations in Tunisia
Luke Skywalker was not a fan of his home planet, Tatooine. ‘If there’s a bright centre to the universe,’ he moaned to C-3PO at the beginning of the original Star Wars film, ‘you’re on the planet that it’s farthest from.’ Its galactic coordinates might be unknown, but Tatooine is a real place, and if you want to visit, you don’t even need to jump through hyperspace – just make your way to southern Tunisia.
For Tatooine, read Tataouine, the dusty Berber town that caught the eye of director George Lucas when he was planning the first movie in the mid-1970s. To find out where it all began (for Luke, anyway), you need to strike northeast from here to the small hamlet of Matmata.
Looking for Luke
Upon arrival, you might wonder what the fuss is about, but the trick with Matmata is that to find its sights, you have to look down rather than up. The Berber inhabitants of this old farming village sought refuge from the unforgiving sun by burrowing into its soft sandstone. The most famous of its troglodyte houses stood in for Luke Skywalker’s childhood home, where he was raised by his Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru.
The Hotel Sidi Driss (yes, you can even stay here) is a series of deep pits linked by tunnel corridors, with side rooms scooped out of the earth. The largest still retains much of the original set dressing, instantly transporting even the most casual of Star Wars viewers to a galaxy far, far away. The location was later refreshed to film scenes for Revenge of the Sith. Its antechambers are liberally decorated with Star Wars memorabilia, photos of the original filming with a youthful Mark Hamill, and even a few snaps of cosplaying fans grinning with delight. Make sure you enjoy the particularly dramatic views looking down into the house from the ground level above.
Anakin’s Childhood Home
The Tataouine area isn’t just known for the subterranean living of Matmata – it also boasts striking Berber architecture called ksour that caught the eye of the Star Wars production team, this time during the making of the prequel trilogy in the late 1990s.
Ksour (ksar is the singular) are fortified granaries, consisting of gated courtyards and several storeys of vaulted rooms, each reached by dizzying steps. They’re strikingly unique and make the perfect stand-in for the slave quarters of Mos Espa, where Anakin Skywalker spent his early childhood. Two locations were used in filming: the first is the heavily restored Ksar Haddada, where a sign reminds visitors that it starred in the ‘tremendously successful’ movie The Phantom Menace in 1997. The second, and arguably more atmospheric, site is the magnificent Ksar Oued Soltane, which is one of the largest ksour in Tunisia. For the best experience, arrive in the late afternoon when the dipping sun floods everything in golden light.
Galactic Deserts
For the next set of Star Wars locations, you’ll need to divert via the city of Gabès and take the highway due west towards the edge of the Sahara. To drive to Tozeur, you’ll cross the causeway over the saltpans of the Chott El Jerid. Salt piles up in drifts alongside the road, and the horizon stretches until it becomes an alien blur. That mirage you see might well be Luke in his landspeeder rushing out to search for R2-D2: those sequences were filmed right here.
From Tozeur, it’s an easy day trip to reach the last cluster of film locations, and any hotel here knows the movies are a big draw for visitors and can arrange tours. What you’re looking for next, like a stormtrooper searching for droids, is a speck in the middle of nowhere called Ong Jemal. Landscape is key here. While your driver delights in showing you a bit of off-road desert driving, look out for the russet bluff that resembles a camel’s neck (which is what ong jemal means in Arabic). It’s where the spiky red-headed Sith lord Darth Maul kept watch in The Phantom Menace, looking for Qui-Gon Jinn. Climb to the top to gaze out over the desert, and you’ll agree it’s an excellent vantage point.
Tatooine Towns
Close to Ong Jemal lies the location that local guides refer to simply as ‘the Star Wars set,’ which fans will instantly recognize as the town of Mos Espa. For the first prequel, George Lucas constructed an entire Tatooine town for filming, and it still stands today. Step just one foot onto the set, and you immediately feel like an extra in the film. While Matmata undoubtedly holds a special connection to the original Star Wars, at Mos Espa, you can actually stroll around the streets and between buildings and towering moisture vaporators, half-expecting a jawa to pop up at any moment. A word of warning: some tours include this spot only as part of a longer itinerary, so if you’re on a fan pilgrimage, make it clear to your driver that you don’t want to be hurried after just five minutes. This location is worth savoring.
There’s one final location to visit before your Star Wars journey concludes. After looking down into the troglodyte house at Matmata, you may wonder about the iconic igloo-shaped structure featured in the films. For that, you’ll need to drive past Tozeur towards the small town of Nefta. As you do, look for the distinctive dome of the Skywalker Homestead on the pancake-flat sandy plain. This isn’t quite the original 1970s construction, but it’s on the same spot and was rebuilt by Lucasfilm for Revenge of the Sith. It’s fitting to come here as the light dips to stand on the spot where Luke gazed wistfully out over the horizon to a swelling John Williams score and dreamed of what adventures might lie ahead.
Although we can’t promise you a Tatooine-style double sunset, we’re pretty sure you’ll still feel the Force.
Make It Happen
All the Star Wars film locations can be easily accessed by hire car, except for Ong Jemal, which requires a 4WD. Tours are available in Tozeur to Ong Jemal and Mos Espa, which aren’t accessible by public transport. Guides have good local desert knowledge but may struggle if you ask them the difference between an X-Wing and a TIE fighter. Matmata is linked to major towns by minibus, but rural public transport is limited for Ksar Haddada and Ksar Oued Soltane. If you don’t have a car, all three can be conveniently visited by hiring a taxi for the day from Tataouine.