The Scottish Mail on Sunday

See the real stars of Kirsten’s grand tour

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FROM travelogue­s to films and even webcams, NEIL SIMPSON reveals how you can still explore the world from your own home during the lockdown.

SEEING the sights of Europe was a far more glamorous affair in the early 1960s, so take a step back into that golden age in the sundrenche­d movie thriller The Two Faces Of

January. A couple of wealthy American tourists, played by Viggo Mortensen and Kirsten Dunst, drift from one glorious setting to another, including the Acropolis in Athens, clifftop ruins in Crete, and the minarets and markets of Istanbul.

The 2014 film is based on a Patricia Highsmith novel, so there’s darkness amid the sun. But like the adaptation of her better-known The Talented Mr Ripley, starring Matt Damon, Jude Law and Gwyneth Paltrow, the real stars here are the scenery and the sparkling sea.

For a travelogue with a much lighter touch, turn to a very different American author: Bill Bryson. His classic book Notes From A Big Country from the 1990s (first published as columns in The Mail on Sunday) still paints a perfect picture of his homeland.

His descriptio­n of cheap American motels, where he says that it feels perfectly normal to be woken at 3am by a female voice screaming ‘Honey, put down the gun and give me the baby’, is a joy. It’s now available as a paperback, e-book or audiobook.

Keep smiling as you explore the stunning landscapes and wideopen spaces of Finland online. The country’s tourist board sprinkles plenty of humour amid the glorious photograph­s that are on display at visitfinla­nd.com.

The ‘Find The Finn In You’ section generates your Finnish name (I’m now Sampo Sammalkorp­i) and tells you what the words mean. Scroll on to read all about Santa Claus, saunas and the ‘six steps to be happy like a Finn’ before researchin­g the perfect igloo, icehotel, treehouse or cottage for a future trip.

A desert island might feel like

the ideal place to ride out the storm of lockdown – and the BBC Sounds app offers The Food Programme: Stranded! How To Eat On A Desert Island.

It reveals that we needn’t go hungry while we’re there. From seaweed (‘nature’s original multivitam­in’) to sea kale, the show explains ‘the restaurant is always open on the beach’.

Apparently, there are just three ingredient­s are needed to recreate the spa experience of a five-star hotel at home. The group of MarBella Collection hotels in Greece has put together a series of simple (if potentiall­y rather messy) face-mask recipes using some honey, bananas and orange juice. Find the recipes, alongside many other Mediterran­eaninspire­d activities, by searching

#Athomewith­marbella online. If those beauty treatments have got you ready for a Zoom close-up with friends, you need to dress the part to stay in the holiday mood. Click on the fashion section of travel gift shop airportag.com for ideas. It’s an American site but products can be priced in pounds and sent to the UK. Favourite slogans on T-shirts include Do I Look Like I Fly Economy? and Jet Lag Made Me Do It. Alternativ­ely, pick a shirt that says what most travelfans are thinking this spring: I’d Rather Be Flying.

 ??  ?? GOLDEN AGE: Viggo Mortensen and Kirsten Dunst tour Europe in The Two Faces Of January
GOLDEN AGE: Viggo Mortensen and Kirsten Dunst tour Europe in The Two Faces Of January

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