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Grand Tour

Grand Tour

  • Status: Released
  • 27-11-2024
  • Runtime: 129 min
  • Score: 6.721
  • Vote count: 34

In 1917 Burma (now Myanmar), a British diplomat is set to marry his fiancée, but after a sudden panic, escapes to Singapore, sending her on what evolves into a chase across Asia.

Gonçalo Waddington

Edward

Crista Alfaiate

Molly

Cláudio da Silva

Timothy Sanders

Lang Khê Tran

Ngoc

Jorge Andrade

Reginald

João Pedro Vaz

Reverendo Carpenter

João Pedro Bénard

Horace Seagrave

Teresa Madruga

Espia

Joana Bárcia

Lady Dragon

Diogo Dória

Major Brown

Jani Zhao

Noiva Chinesa

Manuela Couto

Mrs. Cooper

Américo Silva

Comandante Britânico

Rembrandt Beerens

Príncipe Tailandês

Kazuo Kon

Keita

Giacomo Leone

Signor Farnese

Anais Lin Chastres

Esposa Umar

Anmol Singh

Umar

Nguyen Van Viet

Médico Vietnamita

Vasco Costa

Gerente Hotel Raffles

Jianan Hua

Collie que Canta

Maina Tamang

Velha Tibetana

Aibir Pari Lama

Velho Tibetano

Lary Baron

Cantor Karaoke

Julian Bonnin

Passenger of the train

Giulia Cosentino

Lucy

André Lourido

Guest at Prince's Ball

Carla Madeira

Train passenger

Vasco Pimentel

Mr. Cooper

Benjamin Vasquez Barcellano Jr.

Dock worker (uncredited)

badelf

Miguel Gomes's "Grand Tour" stands as one of the most creatively audacious films in recent memory, fully deserving of the Best Director prize at Cannes 2024. Drawing inspiration from W. Somerset Maugham's "The Gentleman in the Parlour" and "Mabel," Gomes crafts something wholly original – a cinematic tapestry that weaves together travelogue, love story, comedy, and philosophical meditation with breathtaking virtuosity. The film's premise seems deceptively simple: Edward, a spineless British civil servant in 1917 Burma, flees on the eve of his wedding, while his joyful, determined fiancée Molly pursues him across Asia. But Gomes transforms this framework into a profound exploration of intimacy, connection, and cultural perspective. What initially appears as a period piece gradually reveals itself as something far more complex. The accumulating anachronisms – modern footage interspersed with studio sets, contemporary sounds bleeding into period scenes – aren't mistakes but intentional artistic choices. Gomes collapses time, creating a dialogue between colonial past and postcolonial present that interrogates how we perceive both history and the "exotic." The emotional core of "Grand Tour" lies in its exquisite portrayal of two souls moving through the same spaces at different times. Edward's journey represents fear of intimacy and commitment, while Molly's pursuit embodies unwavering devotion. Their separate but parallel journeys become a metaphorical dance, played out against stunning landscapes and cultural encounters. The film transforms from screwball comedy to something profoundly moving as these halves converge toward the astonishing final sequence. I'm quite partial to magic surrealism, and although Grand Tour isn't quite that genre, it's at least a fraternal sibling. Gomes employs every cinematic tool available – the voiceovers in multiple Asian languages, the stunning black and white photography, the brilliant musical selections ranging from traditional instruments to karaoke renditions of "My Way" – creating a sensory experience that feels both intellectually stimulating and emotionally resonant. "Grand Tour" exemplifies cinema's unique capacity to transcend boundaries – between past and present, comedy and tragedy, East and West, artifice and authenticity. Like the best travel experiences, it doesn't merely show us new vistas but transforms our perspective. We emerge from this grand journey carrying not just postcard memories but a deeper understanding of human connection across the seemingly insurmountable distances of time, culture, and the heart.

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