Best Travel Films of All Time | Zachary W Rothe

Zachary W Rothe is from Washington USA. Zack is largely a traveler UN agency is often within the thick of designing his next trip. Rothe need to Explore the planet. His mind is often brooding about to go to new places and he desires to do and comprehend all the cultures and regions.



It is said that, more than any other piece of ephemera of pop culture, the film has the power to transport-to whisk you away on a European adventure (Before Sunrise), crossing the deserts of Africa (Out of Africa), and even send you to not never seen before Paradise Falls (Up). These 50 films are particularly charming, with a story saying that evoke the magic (or the harsh reality) of travel and the beautiful scenery that controls the senses. Read on for a favorite travel film editors past and present-and your Netflix queue ready.


Roman Holiday (1953)
What's not to love about the classic black-and-white? It has Audrey Hepburn, it has Gregory Peck, it is set in Rome; No unique, funny love story. Hepburn plays a princess in town for a tour of goodwill, the American news agency reporter Peck who missed the great interview with HRH. When he helps a young, apparently drunk woman one night and let him sleep it in his apartment, he realized he might have a scoop of his career as a news report the next day said the princess had to cancel her engagement due to illness. And then he cut the two together. Here is a great romp, with Peck, played a regular joe and a local guide to the daughter, who just want to shed royal obligations and enjoy a bit of freedom to change. their tour of Rome proved the perfect catalyst for their budding romance, and it is impossible to not have the same effect on the audience.


To Catch a Thief (1955)
As a cat burglar Cary Grant, Grace Kelly as a wealthy debutante, falls in love under the guidance of Alfred Hitchcock? Sold. This stunning thriller filmed in Cannes and Nice and perfectly captures the Golden Age of travel we always wax poetic about, which currently carries a gold lame gown to the beach is a no-brainer.


Doctor Zhivago (1965)
Russia during the Soviet Revolution doesn't exactly sound like a prime tourist destination, but director David Lean makes a big argument for the country's haunting beauty in this romantic epic (even though it was actually shot in Spain). From the opulence of Imperial Moscow to the flowering countryside of the Urals to the windswept Siberian tundra, Lean's camera is as much as in love with the landscape as it is with Julie Christie's doe-eyed Lara.

The Endless Summer (1966)
“Catch a wave and you’re sitting on top of the world,” sang the Beach Boys; and if ever a film embodied that mindset, it’s Bruce Brown’s 1966 surfer documentary. Brown shadowed buddies Robert August and Mike Hynson on a round-the-world surfing trip, filming their travels to places like Hawaii, New Zealand, and South Africa as they crested waves and met like-minded surf obsessives. The film’s impact on surf culture and tourism was huge, thanks in no small part to Brown’s cinematography, as well as the subjects’ ability to make riding those impossibly large waves seem effortless.




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