Grand Tour
- 2024
- 2h 9min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
2.1 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Edward, civil servant, flees fiancée Molly on their wedding day in Rangoon, 1917. His travels replace panic with melancholy. Molly, set on marriage, amused by his escape, trails him across A... Leer todoEdward, civil servant, flees fiancée Molly on their wedding day in Rangoon, 1917. His travels replace panic with melancholy. Molly, set on marriage, amused by his escape, trails him across Asia.Edward, civil servant, flees fiancée Molly on their wedding day in Rangoon, 1917. His travels replace panic with melancholy. Molly, set on marriage, amused by his escape, trails him across Asia.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 10 premios ganados y 22 nominaciones en total
Rembrandt Beerens
- Príncipe Tailandês
- (as Rembrant Beerens)
Opiniones destacadas
Miguel Gomes Grand Tour is a visually mesmerizing film that feels like a love letter to Asia, celebrating its rich cultural heritage and landscapes. Every shot is carefully composed, with meticulous attention to framing and timing, creating a sense of immersion that invites the viewer into the world of the film. The use of real locations adds depth and authenticity, making the setting feel like an integral part of the story rather than just a backdrop.
The first chapter follows Edward as he flees from his fiancée, Molly, and embarks on a directionless journey. This section feels disconnected and almost lost, much like Edward himself. It's as the film is reflecting his emotional state aimlessly wandering without a clear path, allowing chance encounters to dictate his course.
In contrast, the second chapter, which follows Molly's determined pursuit of Edward, has a more defined sense of purpose. As she chases him across Asia, the narrative feels tighter, with more focus and direction. Molly's clear objective helps guide the audience through her journey, making it easier to connect with her.
The dialogue, primarily in Portuguese, was a refreshing highlight, and I found myself wishing for even more of it. It's rare for me to see a film where Portuguese takes center stage, and it adds another layer of uniqueness to the film.
In the end, Grand Tour is a beautiful, contemplative work, filled with stunning visuals, soundtrack and a clear sense of care in every frame. It's clear to see why Gomes was awarded Best Director at Cannes his passion for both the story and the setting is palpable in every moment.
The first chapter follows Edward as he flees from his fiancée, Molly, and embarks on a directionless journey. This section feels disconnected and almost lost, much like Edward himself. It's as the film is reflecting his emotional state aimlessly wandering without a clear path, allowing chance encounters to dictate his course.
In contrast, the second chapter, which follows Molly's determined pursuit of Edward, has a more defined sense of purpose. As she chases him across Asia, the narrative feels tighter, with more focus and direction. Molly's clear objective helps guide the audience through her journey, making it easier to connect with her.
The dialogue, primarily in Portuguese, was a refreshing highlight, and I found myself wishing for even more of it. It's rare for me to see a film where Portuguese takes center stage, and it adds another layer of uniqueness to the film.
In the end, Grand Tour is a beautiful, contemplative work, filled with stunning visuals, soundtrack and a clear sense of care in every frame. It's clear to see why Gomes was awarded Best Director at Cannes his passion for both the story and the setting is palpable in every moment.
Never have I ever been so annoyed at the cinema, but stayed for the whole thing out of respect for other viewers.
This movie has no plot, no relatable characters, no compelling story. The comedic reliefs are utterly unfunny (really, why does anyone laughs at women cursing at men anymore? Peak boomer humor). It does not evoke any feelings other than a deep feeling of irritation and wasted time. It's really oddly paced and quite frankly, boring.
Some shots are pretty (if you've never been to Asia) and I have to appreciate the use of traditional asian music.
However, it's not enough to make up for how badly it is structured and how really pointless this movie is. One of the worst films I've ever seen (and I'm usually quite generous with my ratings).
This movie has no plot, no relatable characters, no compelling story. The comedic reliefs are utterly unfunny (really, why does anyone laughs at women cursing at men anymore? Peak boomer humor). It does not evoke any feelings other than a deep feeling of irritation and wasted time. It's really oddly paced and quite frankly, boring.
Some shots are pretty (if you've never been to Asia) and I have to appreciate the use of traditional asian music.
However, it's not enough to make up for how badly it is structured and how really pointless this movie is. One of the worst films I've ever seen (and I'm usually quite generous with my ratings).
Miguel Gomes is a Portuguese director, iconoclast and postmodern. His work may seem strange to us if we are used to the "Hollywood diet". However, his idea of adapting W. Somerset Maugham in these times became «Grand Tour», a story of contemporary resonance. In the film someone says that Westerners will never understand Eastern cultures, and the film is the evidence, but Gomes came out of the test with flying colors with the visual and sound solutions he gave to this great journey, for which he was awarded the Best Director award at the Cannes film festival in 2024.
I think many of us may like «Canticle of All Creatures» (2006), about St. Francis and St. Clare; the passionate romance of «Tabu» (2012) and the experimental short «Redemption» (2013); we may find the musical docudrama of country life «Our Beloved Month of August» (2008) or the self-referential film made during the pandemic «The Tsugua Diaries» (2021) rather complicated, but we all agree that he is an author of great wit.
In the plot of the film, set in 1918, an Englishman named Edward Abbott (Gonçalo Waddington) who lives and works in Rangoon arrives in Mandalay in his wedding suit to meet his fiancée Molly, but he suddenly decides to leave Burma and flee to Singapore. At his destination, a telegram arrives from Molly announcing that she will follow him there, so Edward decides to escape to Thailand by train. When the train derails, thanks to a guide and his three wives he reaches Bangkok, but another telegram from Molly arrives there and Edward flees to Vietnam and from there to the Philippines, Japan and finally China. Along the way he meets fascinating people, but Edward's escape, after an hour, becomes iterative, when suddenly, 63 minutes into the film, we do not see Edward anymore and so enters the scene Molly (Crista Alfaiate), a determined and passionate woman who will dominate the rest of the plot and raise the tone and rhythm of the film until reaching the beautiful poetic ending that the scriptwriters gave to these characters with such an ungrateful destiny.
The story of Edward and Molly is inspired by W. Somerset Maugham's story «Mabel», all the details of the trip were suggested by his travel book «The Gentleman in the Parlour. A Record of a Journey from Rangoon to Haiphong», and I suppose that the allusions to Edward being a spy are based on the fact that Somerset worked for the British Secret Service during World War I. And indeed, the Cannes award is well deserved for the visual and musical resources it proposes: to illustrate each city of the "grand tour" in 1918, instead of giving us BBC-style period reconstructions, Gomes uses contemporary images of each city, suggesting that these stories take place at any time in history.
Gomes combined black and white with colour images, introduced shadow theatre and puppet sequences, and shot in studio scenes in sets of jungles and interiors of mansions of great plastic beauty (thanks to the Portuguese cinematographer Rui Poças, the Chinese Guo Liang, and the Thai Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, a frequent collaborator of Apichatpong Weerasethakul). The musical selection ranges from Johann Strauss II's "On the Beautiful Blue Danube" (1866) to Charles Trenet's "La mer" (1946), in a 1959 version by Bobby Darin, to Gabriel Ruiz Galindo's classic "Amor" (1944), performed by a band of old Chinese jazzmen in the film.
My only complaint is that the film drags on a bit, especially in the montages of modern views of each place on the tour, which is a brilliant idea, but could have used some trimming. However, «Grand Tour» is different, healthy cinema, not a recycling of old vampires or a story of people of confused gender, but a refreshing take on adventure film and romantic drama.
I think many of us may like «Canticle of All Creatures» (2006), about St. Francis and St. Clare; the passionate romance of «Tabu» (2012) and the experimental short «Redemption» (2013); we may find the musical docudrama of country life «Our Beloved Month of August» (2008) or the self-referential film made during the pandemic «The Tsugua Diaries» (2021) rather complicated, but we all agree that he is an author of great wit.
In the plot of the film, set in 1918, an Englishman named Edward Abbott (Gonçalo Waddington) who lives and works in Rangoon arrives in Mandalay in his wedding suit to meet his fiancée Molly, but he suddenly decides to leave Burma and flee to Singapore. At his destination, a telegram arrives from Molly announcing that she will follow him there, so Edward decides to escape to Thailand by train. When the train derails, thanks to a guide and his three wives he reaches Bangkok, but another telegram from Molly arrives there and Edward flees to Vietnam and from there to the Philippines, Japan and finally China. Along the way he meets fascinating people, but Edward's escape, after an hour, becomes iterative, when suddenly, 63 minutes into the film, we do not see Edward anymore and so enters the scene Molly (Crista Alfaiate), a determined and passionate woman who will dominate the rest of the plot and raise the tone and rhythm of the film until reaching the beautiful poetic ending that the scriptwriters gave to these characters with such an ungrateful destiny.
The story of Edward and Molly is inspired by W. Somerset Maugham's story «Mabel», all the details of the trip were suggested by his travel book «The Gentleman in the Parlour. A Record of a Journey from Rangoon to Haiphong», and I suppose that the allusions to Edward being a spy are based on the fact that Somerset worked for the British Secret Service during World War I. And indeed, the Cannes award is well deserved for the visual and musical resources it proposes: to illustrate each city of the "grand tour" in 1918, instead of giving us BBC-style period reconstructions, Gomes uses contemporary images of each city, suggesting that these stories take place at any time in history.
Gomes combined black and white with colour images, introduced shadow theatre and puppet sequences, and shot in studio scenes in sets of jungles and interiors of mansions of great plastic beauty (thanks to the Portuguese cinematographer Rui Poças, the Chinese Guo Liang, and the Thai Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, a frequent collaborator of Apichatpong Weerasethakul). The musical selection ranges from Johann Strauss II's "On the Beautiful Blue Danube" (1866) to Charles Trenet's "La mer" (1946), in a 1959 version by Bobby Darin, to Gabriel Ruiz Galindo's classic "Amor" (1944), performed by a band of old Chinese jazzmen in the film.
My only complaint is that the film drags on a bit, especially in the montages of modern views of each place on the tour, which is a brilliant idea, but could have used some trimming. However, «Grand Tour» is different, healthy cinema, not a recycling of old vampires or a story of people of confused gender, but a refreshing take on adventure film and romantic drama.
This evening I have been to the cinema and seen Miguel Gomes' "Grand Tour 2024"
"SHOW DON'T TELL!" - IS a well known rule of storytelling, yet still this film chooses to use a narrator telling important parts of the story without playing them out!
Curious? Considering seeing it?
Don't! Unless you appreciate: the WEIRD, ABSTRACT and uncomprehensible?
7 (Seven) people in the audience walked out of the movie theatre during the film!
ONE next to me FELL ASLEEP and I would have let him sleep - IF it wasn't for him SNORING LOUDLY!
A QUOTE IN the film is: - "the Orient is uncomprehensible for white men!"
BUT ALAS I believe that some from the audiences comments after are correct: - "Pretentious crap"! And "frustrating ending"!
I - "soldiered through", because I am driven by curiosity and a desire to comprehend!
BUT it is an illogical mess: the: "English or American" characters speak Portuguese and some Asians spoke French! Yet they have conversations in respective languages!
It's supposed to be happening 1918, but suddenly we're in present time, cellphones modern cities and scooters!
Generally - DON'T!
"SHOW DON'T TELL!" - IS a well known rule of storytelling, yet still this film chooses to use a narrator telling important parts of the story without playing them out!
Curious? Considering seeing it?
Don't! Unless you appreciate: the WEIRD, ABSTRACT and uncomprehensible?
7 (Seven) people in the audience walked out of the movie theatre during the film!
ONE next to me FELL ASLEEP and I would have let him sleep - IF it wasn't for him SNORING LOUDLY!
A QUOTE IN the film is: - "the Orient is uncomprehensible for white men!"
BUT ALAS I believe that some from the audiences comments after are correct: - "Pretentious crap"! And "frustrating ending"!
I - "soldiered through", because I am driven by curiosity and a desire to comprehend!
BUT it is an illogical mess: the: "English or American" characters speak Portuguese and some Asians spoke French! Yet they have conversations in respective languages!
It's supposed to be happening 1918, but suddenly we're in present time, cellphones modern cities and scooters!
Generally - DON'T!
Hailed in Cannes for innovative direction, I cannot agree. "Grand Tour" comes as an arty project which would have been better as a travelogue. Alas, the filmmaker wanted to give us a story and lifted an idea from the short story "Mabel" by W. Somerset Maugham, though he forgot to tell tell us about it. The short story is only 5 pages long, which is why the "story" is told to us in a way that feels like a joke told by a person with a speaking disorder. You already know what comes next but out of politeness you have to wait. This is deadly boring and some people fled the movie after the first half an hour and I wish I had followed their example. In between the narrative which is set to be in 1917 and filmed in b/w, we get a lot of contemporary stuff in color. Yes, the camera work is brilliant and the editing too, therefore I give it a four instead of a two.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaPeriod scenes were shot in studio. Present day scenes were shot live on location, without script.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Büyük Yolculuk
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 53,804
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 9,176
- 30 mar 2025
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 878,242
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 9 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was Grand Tour (2024) officially released in Canada in French?
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