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| Around The World In 80 Days [2002] | ![Around The World In 80 Days [2002]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51T3D35WN8L._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Directors: Clem Vallance, Roger Mills Actors: Michael Palin, Terry Gilliam, Alan Whicker, Basil Pao, Terry Jones Studio: 2 Entertain Video Category: DVD
List Price: £19.99 Buy New: £13.98 You Save: £6.01 (30%)
New (5) from £6.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 20 reviews Sales Rank: 6220
Format: Box Set, Pal Languages: English (Subtitled), English (Original Language) Rating: Parental Guidance Running Time: 340 minutes Number Of Items: 3 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.9
EAN: 5014503122126 ASIN: B0000AISJE
Theatrical Release Date: 2002 Release Date: September 22, 2003 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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Amazon.co.uk Review Great ideas seem inevitable once they have been successful, and here is one of the very best. In 1873 Jules Verne, wrote Around the World in 80 Days, in which Phineas Fogg attempted to circumnavigate the globe in no more than the titular timespan. In 1989, for this ten-part (eight-hour, 20 minute) BBC documentary, and using only the modes of transport available to the novelist's intrepid traveller, Michael Palin attempted to turn the fiction into reality. Hiring Palin was the masterstroke which ensured the series became a television milestone, for despite being one of the comedy-surrealists of Monty Python's Flying Circus and the perpetrator of Ripping Yarns, he proved to be the most amiable travelling companion imaginable. His charm and ingenuity, coupled with the race-against-time format and the opportunity to visit at second-hand places most of us will never see, made Around the World in 80 Days an unmissable television event. So much so that Palin soon returned to travel from Pole to Pole (1992), before taking an epic journey round the Pacific rim for Full Circle (1997). --Gary S. Dalkin
Amazon.co.uk Review In 1989 Michael Palin recreated the famous voyage made in 1873 by Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne's epic Around the World in 80 Days. This 10-part (eight-hour) BBC documentary featured Palin and his passepartout using only the modes of transport available to the novelist's intrepid traveller. Hiring Palin was the masterstroke that ensured the series became a television milestone; despite being one of the comedy-surrealists of Monty Python's Flying Circus and the perpetrator of Ripping Yarns, he proved to be the most amiable travelling companion imaginable. His charm and ingenuity, coupled with the race-against-time format and the opportunity to visit at second-hand places most of us will never see, made Around the World in 80 Days an unmissable television event. So much so that Palin soon returned to the travel format in Pole to Pole (1992), Full Circle (1997) and Sahara (2002). --Gary S Dalkin
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| Customer Reviews: Read 15 more reviews...
Fantastic fun March 16, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm not usually moved to write review on amazon, but after watching this documentary for the first time since it was originally broadcast, and thoroughly enjoying every second of it, I feel I should also put down my thoughts.
There are a number of factors that go into making this travelogue so eminently watchable. There is the genial, witty persona of Michael Palin which comes through strongly on the narration; the different characters he meets on his travels (watch out for the Indian chap on the dhow bopping along to Bruce Springsteen!); the race against time element (judicious editing means that despite 80 days covered in 7 episodes, you get a real feel for the clock ticking away against him). All these aspects come together to give the viewer and engrossing, entertaining spectacle.
I genuinely felt sad at the end of the last episode, all my fun was over! Although, I think the saddest thing is the fact that 20 years have passed by so quickly since it was made.
Highly recommended.
Agreeable man circumnavigates with little time for shopping. June 21, 2007 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
National treasure-to-be, not entirely sure whether Python-style humour is required, Palin spends a lot of time aboard trains and boats, sometimes talking people, sometimes uneasily trying to avoid people in the streets. And all of it amid this trite 1980s theme music. As Mike correctly identifies in the interview, episode #3 on the dhow is much the best.
Around the world in seven episodes January 15, 2006 24 out of 24 found this review helpful
"Around the World in 80 Days" was made in 1988, and marked the start of Michael Palin's career in making travelogues for BBC television. The program was a huge success and has since been sold to many other television stations all over the world, and was released on videotape, and now on DVD. Since then five other BBC travelogues have been made with Michael Palin: "Pole to Pole", "Full Circle", "Hemingway Adventure", "Sahara" and "Himalaya". I recommend all of them, as well as the books that have been made for each trip.In this trip Michael Palin follows roughly in the footsteps of the fictitious Phileas Fogg, the hero of Jules Verne's novel from 1872. The self-imposed rule was that airplane travel was not allowed, so the trip had to be done by train, ship, car, bus, etc. The trip is beautifully filmed and Michael Palin's wit and charm makes it a special experience. Many different cultures and countries are experienced, and many interesting people and situations encountered. A somewhat negative aspect is that a large portion of the travel time was aboard ships. With the exception of a dhow trip across the Arabian Sea (a high point of the entire trip) the days aboard ships were rather boring and prevented the interesting experiences that land travel would have resulted in. This is most evident when Michael Palin disembarks from one ship in Singapore harbor at midnight and rushes through immigration and then exit processing and leaves the harbor at 2 AM to take a launch out to another ship that is waiting for him at sea just outside the harbor! He never gets to see Singapore at all, and remarks himself, "I thought I'd see the world on this trip. I can't see a thing!" Despite the above criticism this is a great program and highly recommended. The DVD version consists of three discs with seven 50-minute episodes, for a total of almost six hours. One slightly unexpected thing is that the first six episodes cover the first half of the journey (London to the middle of the Pacific) while the last half of the journey is covered by a single episode. But it does actually make sense, as the last half of the journey is mostly ship travel and crossing the United States. The first half of the journey is much, much more complicated and many more countries are crossed or visited, and the first half also took many more days (58) than the last half (22). As extra material on the DVDs there is a very interesting 18-minute interview with Michael Palin that I really liked. Among the intriguing facts that are revealed: - Michael Palin was very flattered when the BBC contacted him and told him that he'd been selected for this program because they thought that he was exactly the right person for the job. It was only later that he discovered that he had been number four on a list of possible candidates - the first three had all declined! - The BBC's contract with the producer was to make a program consisting of six episodes. But during the editing they became convinced that the trip across the Arabian Sea with the dhow was so fascinating that it should take up 45 minutes instead of 10 minutes in the program, and that the entire program should then be seven episodes. The BBC's initial reaction to being given seven episodes instead of six was one of ingratitude! Highly recommended, as are all of the Michael Palin travelogues, both on DVD and as books. Rennie Petersen
A great travelogue but Poor on places of attraction January 19, 2005 1 out of 31 found this review helpful
If you want to see places of attractions around the world then definitely this is not the DVD for you.This is a story about how Palin used Non-Air routes [Road, Rail,Water] to go around the world in 80 days. It does show different cultures and modes of transportation though [Both connecting countries and within a country]. It encourages one to take such a expidition for oneself, on not necessarily such a bigger scale though. Bottomline: A good treat for thouse who love to read on how on earth one travelling around world in less than 3 months, without using air but a definite NO for those who are wanting to see places of attractions in different countries.
Great.......but picture could be better! August 25, 2004 6 out of 13 found this review helpful
I first saw this on the American cable channel Bravo last year and recorded it on my dvd recorder. I thought it was excellent and Michael Palin does a great job on it!! I have a multi code dvd player so i decided to buy the BBC dvd because it has no commercials on it. When i reveived it i watched it for a minute or two and noticed the picture was less than perfect and not as clear as it should be. That is why i give it 4 stars instead of 5.
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