The Reluctant Traveler
Original title: The Reluctant Traveler with Eugene Levy
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Follows the adventures of Levy as he visits some of the world's most remarkable hotels, as well as explores the people, places, and cultures.Follows the adventures of Levy as he visits some of the world's most remarkable hotels, as well as explores the people, places, and cultures.Follows the adventures of Levy as he visits some of the world's most remarkable hotels, as well as explores the people, places, and cultures.
- Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
- 2 wins & 6 nominations total
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Featured reviews
Considering the plethora of highly rated, award winning movies and series available to watch, I NEVER thought I would prefer to watch a travel series on Apple TV! Eugene Levy shares his travel experience as only he can and that is what makes this show MAGICAL! His wry sense of humor and ALWAYS well delivered cynical communication style is nothing less than addictive! I have had many laughs with my family while watching this entertaining and educational show! I think this is a must watch and is perfect entertainment for anyone who thinks a travel show on Apple TV is the last thing they would ever want to watch. Hilarious! Culturally astute! Perfectly done!
So glad we found this show. The photography is stunning, Eugene Levy is hilarious but at the same time humble and respectful as a tourist. The show seems to have no other agenda other than taking the viewer to beautiful and interesting places in the world. What a refreshing break from the political agenda that has ruined a lot of shows.
Levy's acting and narration really do a great job of making us feel like we are there with him, out of his comfort zone, in the elements, eating foreign cuisine, and doing many things that scare him.
If you want to watch something that elevates your spirit and curiosity instead of making you feel like you are the scourge of planet earth and the source of all its problems LOL, watch this! Highly recommended.
Levy's acting and narration really do a great job of making us feel like we are there with him, out of his comfort zone, in the elements, eating foreign cuisine, and doing many things that scare him.
If you want to watch something that elevates your spirit and curiosity instead of making you feel like you are the scourge of planet earth and the source of all its problems LOL, watch this! Highly recommended.
I don't think I've ever enjoyed a 'celebrity' travel programme as much as this one. Eugene Levy's droll wit and self-deprecating humour are what elevate The Reluctant Traveler. Despite Levy's trepidation, he tries activities many of us will never actually get to do, and he does them with a marvellously funny perspective. I laughed out loud many times, whilst learning interesting things about a different way of life. The people he meets are fascinating and full of warmth. In today's age of depressing politics, war, climate crises etc, this televisual delight is a breath of fresh air. Sign Mr Levy up for Season Two now! Just joyous.
By now, we should all have come to realize and acknowledge the comic genius of Eugene Levy. From that prototypical, Canadian sketch comedy show, SCTV, that also gave us the late, great John Candy and also the equally incomparable Catherine O'Hara, to the faux-documentaries he co-wrote with Christopher Guest (I refuse to call anything a "mockumentary," even Spinal Tap dang it!), to his very own production company that he created so he and his equally hilarious son, Dan, could co-star (w/Catherine, of course) in the aptly named Schitt's Creek. So I am not sure who initially thought to take a home-body and confirmed curmudgeon like Eugene, who'd done surprisingly little travel (surprising to me, as somebody whose first million would be spent exclusively on it), and plop him into the widest range of cultural, geographical & gastronomical situations one could've imagined and then just trail his every move to see what happened. But it's a solid idea for comedy gold-so long as it's a lone, anxious, fish-out-of-water Eugene Levy. I think it helps if the viewer loves travel; hence, being astonished that our protagonist doesn't.
Back in 2015, I went nomad for a long time and travelled cheaply, nonstop for a few years.
So, I love travel. But...
Some angry-at-the-world chump below slammed this series as some huge entitlement thing. Whatever. You do you, man.
But here's the thing: Not everyone likes travel. In fact, it's downright terrifying to some folks.
Because if you've got anxiety, travelling is number one with a bullet for triggering that stuff.
And Eugene Levy is a man who's made an entire career out of his anxiety. It's a huge part of his comedy and persona, and it's not a schtick. He doesn't like travelling. He likes to stay home or go to restaurants or play golf.
He's a boring guy because boring works GREAT for anxiety.
This series, however, is one that Apple aggressively pursued him to make. He did so as a realization that he was 75 and staring at ending life with a lot of regrets and questions about whether he could have lived more.
As someone who now sees travel as a part of who I am, I loved seeing this guy starting "getting" what travel is about.
And yes, it's world-class luxury, as a nod to Schitt's Creek, but every time Levy has a potentially lifechanging "aha" travel moment, it's doing stuff that's accessible to every income level - it's meeting the local people without agendas. It's experiencing the simple moments.
If this series shows anyone that there is more to travel than getting off a plane to see the known sites and visit all the popular neighbourhoods, I will be delighted.
As for Levy, he is self-deprecating, charming, droll, open, and even vulnerable as he narrates and hosts the entire show.
I love the series and plan to finish the final three episodes RIGHT NOW.
But if you want a lighthearted, fun, BEAUTIFULLY-shot travel series, despite the posh locales, you won't find any pretensions here. Just curiosity from a guy who's lived an entire life dictated by his fears of everything around him... and, for once, confronting those fears to see what it does for him.
It's a show as much about growth and anxiety as it is about travel, with a lot of good humour along the way.
So, I love travel. But...
Some angry-at-the-world chump below slammed this series as some huge entitlement thing. Whatever. You do you, man.
But here's the thing: Not everyone likes travel. In fact, it's downright terrifying to some folks.
Because if you've got anxiety, travelling is number one with a bullet for triggering that stuff.
And Eugene Levy is a man who's made an entire career out of his anxiety. It's a huge part of his comedy and persona, and it's not a schtick. He doesn't like travelling. He likes to stay home or go to restaurants or play golf.
He's a boring guy because boring works GREAT for anxiety.
This series, however, is one that Apple aggressively pursued him to make. He did so as a realization that he was 75 and staring at ending life with a lot of regrets and questions about whether he could have lived more.
As someone who now sees travel as a part of who I am, I loved seeing this guy starting "getting" what travel is about.
And yes, it's world-class luxury, as a nod to Schitt's Creek, but every time Levy has a potentially lifechanging "aha" travel moment, it's doing stuff that's accessible to every income level - it's meeting the local people without agendas. It's experiencing the simple moments.
If this series shows anyone that there is more to travel than getting off a plane to see the known sites and visit all the popular neighbourhoods, I will be delighted.
As for Levy, he is self-deprecating, charming, droll, open, and even vulnerable as he narrates and hosts the entire show.
I love the series and plan to finish the final three episodes RIGHT NOW.
But if you want a lighthearted, fun, BEAUTIFULLY-shot travel series, despite the posh locales, you won't find any pretensions here. Just curiosity from a guy who's lived an entire life dictated by his fears of everything around him... and, for once, confronting those fears to see what it does for him.
It's a show as much about growth and anxiety as it is about travel, with a lot of good humour along the way.
Did you know
- TriviaEugene starts each episode with this quote: "The world is a book and those who don't travel read only one page".
- How many seasons does The Reluctant Traveler have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Reluctant Traveler with Eugene Levy: Europe
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 35m
- Color
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