14 Sun-Drenched Films To Watch Before Your Next Holiday
With a few notable exceptions (read: Once Upon A Time In Hollywood),
film releases in August tend to be Hollywood blockbusters rather than
future classics – which makes it the perfect season to catch up on the
best summer films ever made. Of course, there are all-time favourites,
like Audrey Hepburn's cinematic debut in Roman Holiday and Marilyn Monroe's turn as a Prohibition-era ukulele player in Some Like It Hot.
Just as good for whiling away a summer's day, however, are cult hits, from Ruth Gordon's timeless performance in Harold and Maude to Elle Fanning's role as a Prada-clad 11-year-old who takes up residence in the Chateau Marmont in Somewhere. Read on for Vogue's guide to the best summer films to watch now – featuring plenty of holiday wardrobe inspiration.
With a runtime of more than three hours, Mektoub My Love is the cinematic equivalent of an endless summer. At the heart of the film is a quiet medical student Amin (Shaïn Boumedine) who returns to his home in the Mediterranean port of Sète, where he and his much wilder cousin Tony begin a series of affairs. Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, it features the same hypnotic, almost voyeuristic cinematography as Blue Is The Warmest Colour along with plenty of throwbacks to hedonist 1990s culture.
Roman Holiday (1953)
It’s practically a moral requirement to include an Audrey Hepburn hit in any list of classic films. Shot in and around Rome, this romance stars Hepburn as Princess Ann, who runs away during a state visit to the Italian capital to experience la dolce vita on her own terms. Her welcoming guide? A reporter for the American News Service, Joe, played by Gregory Peck at his most charming. In case you ever wondered where the stereotype of tourists zipping around Italy on a Vespa comes from, here’s your answer.
Dennis Hopper’s Easy Rider epitomized the American counterculture of the late 1960s. Even Joan Didion weighed in on its success in The White Album.
Peter Fonda and Hopper star as rootless motorcyclists Wyatt and Billy,
who decide to ride their Harley-Davidsons to New Orleans for Mardi Gras.
Joining them on their Transatlantic roadtrip? Jack Nicholson in his
first major role as the “square” lawyer George. It's worth watching to
listen to his Texan accent alone.
Just as good for whiling away a summer's day, however, are cult hits, from Ruth Gordon's timeless performance in Harold and Maude to Elle Fanning's role as a Prada-clad 11-year-old who takes up residence in the Chateau Marmont in Somewhere. Read on for Vogue's guide to the best summer films to watch now – featuring plenty of holiday wardrobe inspiration.
Harold & Maude (1971)
As dark as a dark comedy can be, Harold & Maude
follows a blossoming romance between the ludicrously morbid teenager
Harold Chasen (Bud Cort) and the 79-year-old free spirit Dame Maude
Chardin, played by Ruth Gordon at her absolute best. There are
technicolour scenes of the Bay Area in its glory days; a scene in which a
tree is “liberated” from a shopping centre pavement; and a Cat Stevens
soundtrack that makes all other soundtracks feel irrelevant by
comparison.
The Talented Mr Ripley (1999)
Tom
Ripley’s murderous streak aside, the Hollywood adaptation of Patricia
Highsmith’s 1950s-set novel features scene after scene of genetically
blessed, phenomenally wealthy 20-somethings sunning themselves on the
Sicilian coast, hosting dinner parties in geranium-filled courtyards,
and sailing in the crystal blue Mediterranean. It also happens to be
veritable masterclass in holiday style.
Mektoub My Love (2017)
With a runtime of more than three hours, Mektoub My Love is the cinematic equivalent of an endless summer. At the heart of the film is a quiet medical student Amin (Shaïn Boumedine) who returns to his home in the Mediterranean port of Sète, where he and his much wilder cousin Tony begin a series of affairs. Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, it features the same hypnotic, almost voyeuristic cinematography as Blue Is The Warmest Colour along with plenty of throwbacks to hedonist 1990s culture.
Roman Holiday (1953)
It’s practically a moral requirement to include an Audrey Hepburn hit in any list of classic films. Shot in and around Rome, this romance stars Hepburn as Princess Ann, who runs away during a state visit to the Italian capital to experience la dolce vita on her own terms. Her welcoming guide? A reporter for the American News Service, Joe, played by Gregory Peck at his most charming. In case you ever wondered where the stereotype of tourists zipping around Italy on a Vespa comes from, here’s your answer.
Out Of Africa (1985)
Set
in eastern Africa at the turn of the 20th century, virtually every
frame of Sydney Pollack’s adaptation of Isak Dinesen’s bestselling
memoir is stunning. Meryl Streep does her best Danish accent in the
starring role while clad in enviable linen suits and belted safari
jackets – while Robert Redford takes a turn as a game hunter and amateur
pilot. Even more notable than their romantic chemistry? The film’s
dramatic aerial reviews of the breath-taking landscape in and around the
Great Rift Valley.
Y Tu Mamá También (2001)
Before his masterful Roma, Alfonso Cuarón paid tribute to his native Mexico with coming-of-age story Y Tu Mamá También.
Set during the country’s rise of right-wing populism at the turn of the
millennium, the drama follows a pair of teenage boys, Julio and Tenoch,
on an impromptu road trip through the Mexican countryside with the wife
of Tenoch’s cousin Luisa – searching for an illusory beach known as
Boca del Cielo, or the Mouth of Heaven. Cue both boys falling for her –
and the most complicated summer romance imaginable.
Call Me By Your Name (2017)
No one does a holiday film quite like Luca Guadagnino. Case in point: A Bigger Splash, his 2015 reimagining of La Piscine,
starring Tilda Swinton, Ralph Fiennes, and Dakota Johnson, and named
after a David Hockney painting. For a romantic Italian backdrop,
however, turn to Call Me By Your Name (2017),
shot in northern Lombardy near the Swiss border. The 16th-century Villa
Albergoni in Moscazzano, where the majority of the scenes take place,
might just be the most envy-inducing home on film.
Dirty Dancing (1987)
Nobody puts Baby in a corner. Dirty Dancing
is a masterpiece of 1980s cinema, right down to the excessive hip
gyrations. Set over a summer in a high-end travel resort in the
Catskills, it stars Jennifer Grey as Frances “Baby” Houseman, a teenager
whose holiday goes awry when she meets Patrick Swayze in a leotard, AKA
dance instructor Johnny Castle. Just try to resist the urge to practice
the lift once the film is over.
Before Sunrise (1995)
“I
have an admittedly insane idea, but if I don’t ask it, it’s just going
to haunt me the rest of my life...” In Richard Linklater’s follow-up to Dazed and Confused,
Ethan Hawke plays an American tourist backpacking around Europe for the
summer, while Julie Delpy appears as Céline, a beautiful French girl
travelling back to Paris after visiting her grandmother. After
impulsively getting off the Eurail together in Vienna, the two spend a
life-changing 24 hours together, beginning the holiday romance to end
all holiday romances. You're going to start planning a trip to Austria
as soon as the credits roll.
Almost Famous (2000)
Cameron
Crowe’s semi-autobiographical film is a paean to the golden age of rock
‘n’ roll – and a poignant study of a love triangle between the
reckless, self-centred frontman of band-on-the-rise Stillwater (Billy
Crudup); the dreamy, enigmatic groupie Penny Lane (Kate Hudson); and a
wide-eyed teenage reporter for Rolling Stone
(Patrick Fugit). It’s worth watching for Frances McDormand’s turn as a
concerned mother alone – and her delivery of the iconic line, “My son
has been kidnapped by rock stars!”
Somewhere (2010)
The
Chateau Marmont has never looked better than in Sofia Coppola’s
understated 2010 drama, about a famous Hollywood actor (Stephen Dorff)
whose hedonistic lifestyle is compromised when his 11-year-old daughter
Cleo (Elle Fanning) appears in his hotel suite. Cue the two of them
driving around Los Angeles in a Ferrari, going wild in a lavish Milan
suite during a press tour; and bonding over a shared love of Guitar Hero
while poolside. Keep an eye out for Fanning in a Prada dress that
Coppola bought for herself while travelling in Italy as a girl.
La Piscine (1969)
There
is no better premise for a film than sexual intrigue on the Côte
d'Azur, especially when that film involves Romy Schneider in diaphanous
silk blouses and Jane Birkin in prim gingham two-pieces – all designed
by André Courrèges. Even when the dramatic tension in La Piscine is at its peak, the mood of the film is still somehow languorous and glamorous all at once.
Some Like It Hot (1959)
In
Billy Wilder’s comic masterpiece, saxophonist Joe (Tony Curtis) and
double bass player Jerry (Jack Lemmon) assume drag to hide from a 1920s
Chicago gang, joining an all-female band, Sweet Sue and Her Society
Syncopators, on a trip to Miami. Enter Marilyn Monroe, the group’s
ukulele player, who’s determined to find herself an older Florida
millionaire at the beach. Prohibition never looked so good.
Easy Rider (1969)
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