Michael Palins - Full Circle

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Blizzards, Bogota's Bullet Street and Alaskan abandonment pushed Michael and the crew to the limit as they trekked around the Pacific – and helped forge an astonishing series. This is the richest, longest, most ambitious and most exhausting of all the journeys. There was so much to do and so many different terrains, climates, foods and illnesses to experience that at one point it seemed like we were engaged on the ultimate new Olympic event – Full Circling.

Though at no time was it quite as relentlessly punishing as the heat and sandstorms of the Sahara, the sheer distance covered – 50,000 miles through 17 countries in ten months of filming was a huge test of stamina, and indeed human relations. One day after we’d got back I worked out with Nigel Meakin, the cameraman, how many meals we must have eaten together whilst travelling round the Rim. The answer was 876.

And there's much more useless information like that on the website. From how to cook eggs in a volcano to playing horse's jawbones at parties in Chile. Just a few clicks away are full details of the island on which Robinson Crusoe was abandoned, how to help neuter a dog, and the best place to eat maggots. A circumnavigation of the Pacific Rim is a trip no travel agent will ever offer you, so take the palinstravels version now, and feel insufferably smug.

Michael Palin, 25th September 2002.

Full Circle with Michael Palin is the title of a 1997 documentary television series produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation. Hosted by Michael Palin of Monty Python's Flying Circus fame, Full Circle was one of a series of programmes in which Palin made far-flung trips around the world. The series documented a year-long trip taken by Palin and a film crew around the rim of the Pacific Ocean in 1995, beginning on the Diomede Islands between Alaska and Russia in the Bering Strait. The intent was to make the full counter-clockwise trip around the Pacific Rim and end up back on the Diomede Islands, but due to rough weather, he was unable to actually step foot back on the Islands again at the end of his journey. He got within 2 miles of completing the full circle. Palin travelled through Russia, Japan, South Korea (with a very brief visit to North Korea), China, Vietnam, Philippines, Indonesia, Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Colombia, Mexico, United States, and Canada.

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Full Circle - Farewell DiomedeMichael Palin - Full Circle 1
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Full Circle - Kodo DrummersMichael Palin - Full Circle 2
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Full Circle - QingdaoMichael Palin - Full Circle 3
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Full Circle - Cricket in HanoiMichael Palin - Full Circle 4
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Full Circle - Bound for BorneoMichael Palin - Full Circle 5
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Full Circle - Crocodile FarmMichael Palin - Full Circle 6
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Full Circle - Cape HornMichael Palin - Full Circle 7
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Full Circle - Lake TiticacaMichael Palin - Full Circle 8
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Full Circle - Machiguenga VillageMichael Palin - Full Circle 9
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Full Circle - Mexican CityMichael Palin - Full Circle 10
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Note: The series Full Circle are hosted on: VEOH.COM
Note: Or watch them on: GUBA.COM
Michael Palins - Full Circle
Around the world - Countries Around the world
From Michael Palin and the team that brought you Around the World in 80 Days and Pole to Pole comes the most ambitious journey every undertaken for a television series - 50,000 miles of adventure and humour-packed incident which attempts a complete circle around the world's largest ocean. Michael sets off from Diomede, in the Bering Strait, and hopes to return there one year later via Russia, Japan, Korea, China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Borneo, Indonesia, Australia, New Zealand and the whole length of the Americas. But right from the start things don't go to plan…

About Michael Palin.

Michael PalinHaving graduated from Oxford University in 1965 with ambitions to be a writer and performer of comedy, Michael Palin (born Michael Edward Palin in Sheffield on 5 May 1943) made his first television appearance as the rather unlikely sounding host of a regionally-produced pop show for children, Now (Television Wales and West, 1965-66). Meanwhile, Palin began writing sketch material with Terry Jones (whom he had befriended at university) for various television shows, in addition to working in cabaret with him as a double-act. Their major breakthrough arrived when they were recruited to the writing team of The Frost Report (BBC, 1966-67). Not only was the series itself a huge success, it brought the pair into contact with fellow writers John Cleese (who was also a performer on the show), Graham Chapman and Eric Idle (who they had briefly met at the Edinburgh Festival in 1965).

Although he had begun to appear in sketches on the shows to which he contributed material, Palin's major break as a performer was with the series Do Not Adjust Your Set (ITV, 1967-69). Ostensibly a comedy sketch show for children, but one that quickly gathered an avid adult audience, it featured Palin alongside Jones and Idle (with all three co-writing the series), David Jason and Denise Coffey, with short animation inserts provided by yet another future Python, Terry Gilliam. Palin and Jones followed this with their own series, The Complete and Utter History of Britain (ITV, 1969), a sketch series with, as the title implies, a history-based theme, although it failed to repeat the success of Do Not Adjust Your Set. Their next project, however, succeeded on a scale they could not have imagined. Monty Python's Flying Circus (BBC, 1969-74) finally saw Palin and Jones united with Cleese, Chapman, Idle and Gilliam to create what was to become one of British television's most influential series, comedy or otherwise. Launched without any fanfare, the show quickly drew a cult audience for the sheer originality of its humour, turning the writers/performers into arguably the most important and internationally influential comedy team ever to work in television.

Palin followed Monty Python's Flying Circus with his own superbly realised series, Ripping Yarns (BBC, 1976-79). Palin starred in each episode of this anthology series parodying early twentieth century Boys' Own adventure stories, and co-wrote all the stories with Terry Jones. However, despite the success he enjoyed with Ripping Yarns (it won a BAFTA award in 1980 for best light entertainment series) it was the only post-Python comedy television series in which Palin appeared. He concentrated instead on feature films, co-writing and co-starring in all four Python feature films between 1971 and 1983, and gaining his first solo lead role in Terry Gilliam's Jabberwocky (1977), an uneven fantasy-comedy with a medieval setting, loosely inspired by Lewis Carroll's poem.

Lead roles followed in The Missionary (d. Richard Loncraine, 1981), a period-set story of a refuge for prostitutes in the East End of London which he also wrote and co-produced; A Private Function (d. Malcolm Mowbray, 1984), an Alan Bennett-scripted comedy set in a small rural town in a post-war Britain ruled by austerity and rationing; and American Friends (d. Tristram Powell, 1991), a gentle romantic comedy set within the environs of Oxford University in the 1860s, co-written by Palin and based on the story of his great-grandfather, an Oxford don. He also won a BAFTA award as best supporting actor for his performance in the comedy A Fish Called Wanda (d. Charles Crichton, 1988).

Although he co-starred in the Alan Bleasdale-scripted drama series G.B.H. (C4, 1991), playing a teacher in this story of political corruption, acting, whether in comedy or straight drama, increasingly took a back seat from the late 1980s, as he began to steer his career into new territory. Since the phenomenal success of the documentary series Around the World in Eighty Days (BBC, 1989), in which he followed the route taken by the fictional Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne's novel, Palin has enjoyed renewed success with a spate of travel documentaries. All written and presented by Palin, they are - to date - Pole to Pole with Michael Palin (BBC, 1992), Full Circle with Michael Palin (BBC, 1997), Michael Palin's Hemingway Adventure (BBC, 1999), Sahara with Michael Palin (BBC, 2002) and Himalaya with Michael Palin (BBC, 2004).


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you have missed an episode on this website
written by alan, December 22, 2008
There is an episode on this site that is missing which is the Episode 09 - Peru/Colombia, I clicked on Episode 09 and it took me to Episode 10

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Maza is born in the Netherlands about 40 years ago and has studied economics in the 90's. He is very much a travel buff. He has also a hughe intrest in science and astronomy. At the moment he is working for the local municipality. If you like you can contact him at info @ mazalien.com.© Mazalien 1999 - 2009