August Days lauds the necessity of having fallow time as a prelude to creativity, as two brothers take a caravan on a trip through Catalonia.

The Bucket List tells the story of two seniors who aren't afraid to embrace the big picture like wise fools as they fulfill their end-of-life wishes.

Cold Fever is a valentine to the charms of Iceland and a flinty meditation on a young man's quest to bestow a blessing on his parents.

The Darjeeling Limited takes us along with three American brothers traveling through India, trying to connect with each other and come to terms with the past.

Due Date brings together an angry architect and an aspiring actor on a cross-country journey that changes them both.

Enchanted April shows how a vacation can be miraculously refreshing — and even puts the feel of it within our reach.

The Horse Boy stirs our hearts with the true story of a family that travels all the way to Mongolia for the sake of their autistic son, who loves horses.

The Journey, a six-part documentary, shines a light on the dangerous path of Syrian asylum seekers trying to make their way to the European Union.

Journey to Greenland comically reveals the differences between two friends having a cross-cultural experience in a place that's worlds apart from their familiar routines.

Land Ho! quirkily observes the dreams we invest in vacations, reminding us that we take our problems, fears, and foibles with us when we go.

Letters from Baghdad raises our appreciation of the diversity, mysteriousness, and beauty of Arab and desert culture through the story of visionary adventurer Gertrude Bell.

Megane is an enchanting drama about an uptight woman who gradually opens to the rhythms and sensuousness of island time.

On the Road looks back at the nonconformist Beatniks of the 1950s who yearned for the freedom and pleasures of the open road.

Safety Not Guaranteed combines time travel and romantic comedy to tickle the funny bone and provoke thought about the different dimensions of time.

Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants is about four friends who remain connected while traveling far apart through a ritual they have created around a piece of clothing.

The Trip draws out the playfulness of two actors on the road as they wile away the hours, vying against each other in a hilarious impersonation competition.

The Trip to Italy gives us more guffaws from The Trip's duo as they vocally impersonate actors like Marlon Brando and Al Pacino, with incredible sights enhancing the film's delight.

The Trip to Spain provides another jaunty journey with two middle-age actors savoring the pleasures of Spain.

Up in the Air depicts a world where the borders between here and there are collapsing but, strangely enough, more people than ever have no real sense of home.

World Traveler poignantly and powerfully illustrates that being able to escape from personal problems and pressures by hitting the open road is a myth.