Around the World in Eighty Days is a 1956 movie based on the novel of the same name by Jules Verne, involving a dare proposed to English aristocrat Phileas Fogg by his gentlemen's club to undertake a bold journey to travel around the world in only 80 days.
Many famous performers play bit parts (Todd is credited with inventing the term "cameo appearance"), and part of the pleasure in this movie is playing "spot the star", including those like Marlene Dietrich, George Raft, and even Frank Sinatra to name a few. Highlights of their circumnavigation journey involve their adventurous, and often humorous, exploits from England through France, Spain, the Suez Canal, India, Hong Kong, Japan, and the American Old West. Some of the locations are authentic, but in other cases because of modern development scenes had to be shot on studio backlots. The movie holds the record for the highest number of animals ever employed.
The movie was also nominated for three Golden Globes, of which it was awarded two:
1956 films | Films based on fiction books | Best Picture Academy Award winners | Films over three hours long | Films shot in 65mm
La vuelta al mundo en ochenta días (película de 1956) | Il giro del mondo in 80 giorni (film 1956) | Jorden runt på 80 dagar (film, 1956)
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