Last February 1, it debuted on Raiplay the new season of the drama Mare Fuori, scoring one million views in just two hours. On Feb. 14, however, there was the airing on Rai2, which will continue with two episodes a week for six prime time nights.

Great success in recent years, Sea Out tells the stories of the boys held in Naples' juvenile prison, inspired by the real one in Nisida. Amid love, betrayals, disappointments and hopes, the fourth series picks up where the third left off and shows the young protagonists grappling with difficult situations and changes.

The drama is shot entirely in Naples, and already in previous seasons some of the public spaces best known of the city, including Via Toledo, Molo San Vincenzo, the Umberto Gallery, the Montesanto district, and much more. But what glimpses of Naples are we going to discover this time?

The places we will see in Sea Out 4

The place where most of the scenes in Mare Fuori take place is, of course, theIPM (Juvenile Penitentiary Institute) in Naples, but in this case the real juvenile prison on the island of Nisida was not used, but rather the Navy headquarters at Molo San Vincenzo, which also for this season hosted much of the filming. How can one not recognize the typical red brick buildings in the port area that have now become a pilgrimage destination for the many fans of the TV series?

However, there are new places and areas of Naples that have not yet appeared in previous seasons. For example, we will have several flashbacks to the past of the Ricci family and young Don Salvatore set in Mirelli Palace at the Riviera di Chiaia.

Present once again, of course, is the historic center of the Neapolitan capital, both for interiors and exteriors. In fact, again speaking of the Ricci story we will see some scenes filmed in a building in Vico Fico del Paradiso, the street that welcomes the bronze bust of Punchinello given to the city by artist Lello Esposito.

Among the most striking places, however, is a sumptuous church where Carmine's mother and the Commander meet. It is the church of Santa Maria del Rosario at Porta Medina in the Spanish Quarter. Here the area is shown to us in a spectacular drone shot from above.

Another location used for some scenes is the Conocal district in Ponticelli, one of the most difficult neighborhoods in the eastern area of Naples whose streets are often in a state of decay. In addition to Bagnoli and Forcella, the drama was welcomed in the province of Avellino, specifically at the Marian shrine of Liveri.

Sea Out 4 however also landed at the mythical Diego Armando Maradona Stadium. In fact, last summer several exclusive photos appeared on websites revealing the use of the temple of Neapolitan soccer for filming. We still do not know what scenes were filmed here, but in all likelihood they are flashbacks concerning the past of one of the characters.