
1918. When Edward (Gonçalo Waddington), a British civil servant stationed in Burma, gets cold feet about his upcoming wedding to Molly (Crista Alfaiate), he promptly hops on a boat to Singapore—just the first stop in an unforgettable Asian “grand tour” that takes him to Bangkok, Manila, Tokyo, and Shanghai, among other locales. More bemused than angry, Molly resolves to follow him, a decision that gives rise to a remarkable journey of her own.
Winner of the Best Director prize at Cannes, Miguel Gomes (Tabu, Arabian Nights) mixes whimsical fiction and documentary in Grand Tour. It’s at once a magisterial continental travelogue, a probing examination of colonialism, and a time-warping journey into the history of cinema itself. Featuring luminous black-and-white 16mm cinematography—interspersed with dazzling colour passages—and a considered engagement with silent-era techniques, it is a film that revels in the storytelling pleasures that only cinema can offer.
Best Director: Official Competition, Cannes 2024
Miguel Gomes delivers a film in which the most complex sophistication coexists with innocence and charm.
Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian
Community Partner
Crista Alfaiate, Gonçalo Waddington, Cláudio da Silva, Lang Khê Tran
Portugal/Italy/France
2024
In Portuguese, Chinese, Thai, French, Burmese, Vietnamese, Filipino and Japanese with English subtitles
Book Tickets
Indigenous & Community Access
Indigenous Access Tickets Community Access Tickets Ticket Donation Requests
Credits & Director
Executive Producer
João Miller Guerra
Producer
Filipa Reis
Screenwriter
Mariana Ricardo, Telmo Churro, Maureen Fazendeiro, Miguel Gomes
Cinematography
Rui Poças, Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, Guo Liang
Editor
Telmo Churro, Pedro Filipe Marques
Production Design
Thales Junqueira, Marcos Pedroso

Miguel Gomes
Miguel Gomes (Lisbon, 1972) is a Portuguese film director whose sixth feature, Grand Tour, won Best Director at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival. Since the early 2000s, Gomes has directed several films that have been presented and awarded at international film festivals including Cannes’ Director’s Fortnight and Berlinale. He is currently adapting the written works Savagery and Cantiga for the screen. Gomes has had retrospectives of his work in several countries and lives in Lisbon.
Filmography: The Face You Deserve (2004); Our Beloved Month of August (2008); Tabu (2012); Arabian Nights (2015); The Tsugua Diaries (2021)
Photo by Patricia Neves Gomes
Missing VIFF? Check out what's playing at the VIFF Centre
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
A young couple accept an invitation for a nightcap with history professor George (Richard Burton) and his wife Martha (Elizabeth Taylor). At first it's fun and games. But what passes for caustic wit soon degenerates into vicious mind games.
Drop Dead City
New York, 1975. The city is minutes away from bankruptcy and President Gerald Ford wants no part of it. Sanitation workers are on strike and cops are telling tourists it's not safe to visit. The town is going up in flames and they can't pay the firemen.
In the Mood for Love
Wong Kar-wai's most acclaimed and popular film is a love story about two neighbours (Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung) who are drawn together by the long absences of their respective spouses + a newly released short companion piece from 2001.
Georgia O'Keeffe: the Brightness of Light
Drawing on her copious correspondence and the world's leading scholars, this is a definitive documentary on the life and work of "the mother of American Modernism."