10 Hiking Films That Will Make You Want to Disappear Into the Wilderness

best hiking and thru-hike movies

Wild is one of the most defining hiking movies for me, and one I keep coming back to. I remember watching it for the first time and feeling something shift. It wasn’t just the scale of the Pacific Crest Trail or the physical challenge – it was how honest it felt about starting again when your life doesn’t look the way you thought it would. Cheryl Strayed isn’t presented as strong in the traditional sense; she’s messy, impulsive, and figuring it out as she goes, which made it hit harder.

That same feeling runs through the best hiking movies on this list. They’re not just about the outdoors, but about what happens to you while you’re out there – the discomfort, the clarity, and the quiet shift that comes with it.

Wild (2014)

Director: Jean‑Marc Vallée

Cast: Reese Witherspoon, Laura Dern, Thomas Sadoski

Where it’s set: Pacific Crest Trail, California and Oregon, USA

After her mother’s death and the collapse of her marriage, Cheryl Strayed makes a decision that borders on irrational. She sets out alone to hike over 1,000 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail – with no experience, no preparation, and nothing left to lose. Wild understands something essential: hiking isn’t about strength. It’s all about emotional endurance. The trail becomes a moving confession booth, each step stripping away the versions of herself she can no longer carry. The landscape is vast, indifferent, and quietly healing.

The Salt Path (2024)

Director: Marianne Elliott

Cast: Gillian Anderson, Jason Isaacs

Where it’s set: South West Coast Path, England

After losing their home and receiving devastating medical news, a couple makes a radical decision: they walk the entire 630‑mile South West Coast Path with nothing but a tent and each other. This journey, based on the best-selling memoir by Raynor Winn, is about dignity amid the disappearance of everything familiar. The English coastline becomes both brutal and tender, mirroring the emotional terrain beneath their feet.

Into The Wild (2007)

Director: Sean Penn

Cast: Emile Hirsch, Marcia Gay Harden, William Hurt

Where it’s set: Alaska, USA

Christopher McCandless doesn’t want adventure. He wants the truth. After abandoning his possessions and cutting ties with society, he journeys north toward Alaska, chasing the idea of a purer existence. What he finds is beauty, isolation, and the limits of self‑reliance. Few films capture the seduction of escape as powerfully as Into The Wild. Alaska isn’t just a setting. It’s a mirror — reflecting both freedom and consequence.

Tracks (2013)

Director: John Curran

Cast: Mia Wasikowska, Adam Driver

Where it’s set: Australian Outback, Australia

Robyn Davidson walks 1,700 miles across the Australian desert with four camels and a dog. She doesn’t do it for glory. She does it to reclaim autonomy. The desert is vast and almost abstract – a place where identity dissolves and reforms. Tracks is about solitude, not as loneliness, but as clarity. It’s one of the most meditative hiking films ever made.

The Way (2010)

Director: Emilio Estevez

Cast: Martin Sheen, Emilio Estevez

Where it’s set: Camino de Santiago, Spain

After his son dies while hiking the Camino de Santiago, a father travels to Spain to complete the pilgrimage in his place. What begins as an obligation slowly becomes a transformation. The Camino introduces him to strangers who reflect different versions of grief, healing, and acceptance.The trail doesn’t erase loss. It reshapes it.

Everest (2015)

Director: Baltasar Kormákur

Cast: Jason Clarke, Jake Gyllenhaal, Josh Brolin, Keira Knightley

Where it’s set: Mount Everest, Nepal

Everest captures the thin, terrifying line between ambition and survival. Based on the real 1996 disaster, the film shows how quickly the mountain reminds climbers of their insignificance. The scale is overwhelming. The danger is constant.It’s a reminder that nature doesn’t negotiate.

A Walk In The Woods (2015)

Director: Ken Kwapis

Cast: Robert Redford, Nick Nolte, Emma Thompson

Where it’s set: Appalachian Trail, Eastern USA

Two aging friends attempt to hike the Appalachian Trail, confronting not just physical limitations but the quiet realization that life is finite. It’s funny, self‑aware, and unexpectedly emotional. The trail becomes a confrontation with time itself.

Free Solo (2018)

Director: Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin

Cast: Alex Honnold

Where it’s set: Yosemite National Park, California, USA

Free Solo documents Alex Honnold’s attempt to climb El Capitan without ropes. As you can imagine, the tension is almost unbearable because the stakes are absolute. There is no safety net – physically or psychologically. It’s less about climbing and more about fear, control, and obsession.

The Ritual (2017)

Director: David Bruckner

Cast: Rafe Spall, Arsher Ali, Robert James‑Collier

Where it’s set: Swedish wilderness, Sweden

A group of friends hike through a remote Scandinavian forest, and quickly realize they are not alone. The Ritual uses wilderness as psychological terrain. The forest becomes a manifestation of guilt, grief, and fear. Nature here is ancient, indifferent, and watching.

Happiness for Beginners (2023)

Director: Vicky Wight

Cast: Ellie Kemper, Luke Grimes

Where it’s set: Appalachian Trail, USA

After her divorce, Helen joins a wilderness survival course that forces her far outside her comfort zone. What begins as an obligation slowly becomes liberation. The trail doesn’t just challenge her physically, it rebuilds her sense of self.

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