10 Travel Films & Books That Will Change Your Perspective

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If you were to take through your imaginary bag, pop culture enthusiasts, why not go through 10 travel-themed books and films that not only don’t simply evoke a vacation abroad feeling, but could be the very ones to convert your perspective of life? Whether you are a savvy globetrotter or a couch traveler, these books will walk you through a voyage of adventure, self-introspection, and a nice measure of emotion. Besides, we are proceeding with this countdown-style simply because the suspense makes it more enjoyable.

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10. Abroad in Japan by Chris Broad

Imagine a Brit who doesn’t speak Japanese being lowered down into rural Japan. The result? A mishmash of misadventures, culture shock, and laughter that goes on for a few years. Chris Broad’s memoir is awkward, heartwarming, and enlightening-one of the small but sotable love letters to the oddities of daily life in Japan. So, if you were to ever find yourself wanting to experience the utter foreignness of wrestling with a culture, then consider this your backstage pass for the show.

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9. Eat, Pray, Love

Actually, Elizabeth Gilbert’s one of the most spiritual and enlightening memoirs, later becoming the Julia Roberts movie as well, is soon to set the standard for soul pilgrimages. Italy provides the pasta, India the meditation, and Bali the love. It is more than a travel story; it tells about a new beginning and recognizing oneself again. To those who have ever fantasized about a noodle dish in Rome or having inner peace on the other side of the earth, this one is the right partner.

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8. Inside Out

On some occasions, travel is not about the airports. At times, the journey is the one inward. And Pixar’s Inside Out is just perfect for the job. The film makes emotions the guides to the highs and lows of growing up by showing us the 11-year-old Riley’s mind. It’s vivid, side-splitting, and transcending all at the same time—one of the characters, sadness, even gets to be the one we remember most after all.

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7. Lost in Translation

It is hard to find many films that manage to depict the ambiguity and charm of traveling so well as Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation. The movie is a perfect metaphor for the confused and bustling Tokyo skyline, where Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson meet, very briefly but very tenderly. Karaoke lounges and city lights are, however, not the only elements that constitute the film. It tells a story about being lost in a strange land and that, sometimes, the people you find there are the ones you remember the longest.

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6. The Before Sunrise Trilogy

Untimely and unplanned meetings, long debates, and traveling are just a few things that life has in store for us, and these are exactly the things the Director Richard Linklater has made a love letter out of in the Before trilogy (Before Sunrise, Before Sunset, Before Midnight). By acting as Jesse and Celine walking through the streets of Vienna, their Parisian café, and the roads of Greece, they deepen their relationship with every film. Although it is a love story, one aspect is portrayed through romanticizing, while the other is through deep philosophical thoughts about how only one meeting can change your entire life.

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5. Coco

Once again, the French animation studio Pixar delivers a hit; only, this time, the movie is a joyful and colorful one that celebrates Mexico’s “Día de los Muertos”. Through “Coco,” the story of Miguel’s journey to the Land of the Dead becomes a celebration of family, memory, and the pursuit of one’s dreams. Passionate marigolds, insistent melodies, and a lot of heart make the film an ultimate proof that a voyage to one’s origins can be equally enlightening as exploring a new place.

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4. The Way

In this heartbreaking and lovely tale, Martin Sheen plays the father losing his son and then choosing to walk the Camino de Santiago in Spain. Thus, the film deeply sympathizes with the grieving pilgrim’s walk as it becomes a story of friendship, healing, and change. Not only is the Spanish countryside the backdrop—it’s the silent and magnificent co-protagonist, one that drags the main character and the reader on verrry deep into the journey of meaning.

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3. One Italian Summer by Rebecca Serle

This book is a mixture of grief, self-discovery, and magic set in the Amalfi Coast of Italy. More accurately, Serle is doing the mother-daughter relationship while the sun-drenched cliffs of Positano serve as the background. It is a love story, a wreck of emotions, and a reminder that some places forever change us.

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2. The Motorcycle Diaries

In the first turn of events, before he became the revolutionary icon, Che Guevara was a young guy who decided to take a motorcycle road trip across South America. This movie captures the ruggedness of the trip and the awakening that comes from experiencing the world intimately. It is travel as change – where the views, the people you meet, and their stories move you to empathy and make you feel like you have a cause.

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1. Soul

The lively jazz clubs of New York serve as the starting point for Pixar’s Soul, from where the transition to the afterlife follows, and with it, the introduction of deep questions about the meaning of life and one’s purpose. Instead of it being a tale of chasing after his dreams, Joe Gardner’s is the story of him recognizing the small daily pleasures of life. Furthermore, if we choose to look with more depth, Soul could be turned into a call that sometimes the most remarkable journeys are not about where we end up, but how we arrive there.

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Put this down in your itinerary: an eclectic pop culture travel list that not only navigates the planet, but also the human heart and even the afterlife. These movies and books prove that journeys – both tangible and figurative – have the power to completely change the way we view both ourselves and the world surrounding us. One can still do it while seeking a good laugh, some tears, or the playing of some existential jazz.

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