Your basket is currently empty!
FILMS
1995 | R | 1h 32m
Dir. Austin Vince
The original around-the-world adventure on two wheels through 40 countries in 400 days.
The first ever motorcycle travel TV show. The original and best. The inspiration AND template for Long Way Round. Voted ‘Best Motorcycle Film Ever Made’ by the whatbike.com readers’ poll.
Mondo Enduro documents our ambitious, low-budget motorcycle journey around the world in 1995-96. Setting off from London, we rode eastwards through Europe, Russia, Siberia, Alaska, and South America, facing extreme challenges, mechanical breakdowns, and cultural clashes. The film captures our raw, unedited adventure, highlighting the camaraderie and determination required to circumnavigate the globe on two wheels.
“It may be the best video out there for a real-world look at long-distance motorcycle travel”
RIDER MAGAZINE
2001 | R | 1h 28m
Dir. Austin Vince
In 2001, the first bikes to conquer Siberia’s Zilov Gap.
Terra Circa documents our follow-up motorcycle journey.
This time with basic bikes and even more basic equipment, we cross Russia to become the first recorded motorcyclists ever to cross the gruelling Zilov Gap, a 392-mile stretch of impassable tracks, trails, marshes and rivers where the road across Siberia runs out.
The DVD includes a handsome 56-page booklet of photos and stories.
“Terra Circa is a great primer on what you need, and what you don’t, for a low-funds trip around the world.”
ADVRIDER.COM
2012 | R | 1h 32m
Dir. Austin Vince
28 days of extreme desert adventure.
Mondo Sahara documents our latest expedition and film, the first from DirtPunk. The aim was to ride off-road from London, through Spain, Morocco, and Western Sahara. Following this, we met up with Richard Kemplay of Beast of Burden. While we were riding, he had been burying food, fuel, and water across the deserts of Mauritania. Upon our rendezvous at the Mauritanian border post, he provided us with GPS coordinates of the supply dumps, and we proceeded into the Empty Quarter of the Sahara. A group of Englishmen and Americans, we followed a GPS track across the wilderness for 1200 miles, locating and digging up supplies each night for the next day. Nobody had attempted a journey like this before. Although planned as a four-week trip, it was still a significant adventure.
“The dog’s bollocks. Be warned you will be planning a trip after watching this.”