The Road to Patagonia
Details
- Rated M
- Runtime 90 minutes
- Genre Documentary
- Director Matty Hannon
- Writer Matty Hannon
- Actors ★★★★★ "WARNING: You will want to quit your job after watching this film. Inspiring, intimate and powerful" - Letterboxd ★★★★1/2 "the strength of Patagonia is Hannon's relatability." - The AU REVIEW ★★★★1/2 "Hugely impressive - early contender for the Australian film of 2024" - The Movie Guys ★★★★1/2 "profound exploration of connection and spirit - left me balling my eyes out in a way I haven't in a very long time" - Screenaholics ★★★★ "a personal journey that will make you fall in love with the natural world" - FILMINK "a thoughtful and moving meditation on love, life, and our place in the natural world - a must watch film" - Craig Bellamy
- Language English
- Country Australia
- Awards Winner - Best Film and Best Documentary - Byron Bay International Film Festival 🏆 Winner - Audience Choice award - Florida Surf Film Festival 🏆 Winner - Audience Choice award - Melbourne Documentary Film Festival
Synopsis
The Road to Patagonia is a stunning, intimate and unflinching series of love letters within a documentary - firstly a love between two people, and secondly between humanity and the Earth. We follow Matty Hannon on an incredible solo adventure, to surf the west coast of the Americas by motorbike, from the top of Alaska to the tip of Patagonia. But deep in the wilderness - alone with the wolves and the bears - the journeyer's plans unexpectedly fall to pieces. After losing everything, and on the cusp of quitting he meets the girl of his dreams, a permaculture farmer named Heather Hillier who throws caution to the wind and sells her urban-farm to buy a bike of her own. Together riding south, the duo meet with Zapatista rebels, Amazonian shamans and Mapuche leaders whose salient words crack the adventurers' cultural veneer, leaving them with existential questions. The 50,000km surfing odyssey becomes beautifully complicated by their decision to downshift from motorcycles to horseback, presenting a relational approach to the breathtaking landscapes and a host of challenges that ultimately become extremely rewarding. Hannon and Hillier succeed in beautifully capturing deeply human moments during the world-first expedition, and the noticeable lack of camera-crew becomes The Road to Patagonia's strength. The theme of deep ecology underpins the entire film, visually communicated through exquisite cinematography and emotional verite sequences. Shot over 16 years, the result is an adventurous expose on the more-than-human world, offering a physical and spiritual odyssey to better understand our place in Nature.