Awards • 1995 - Charleston International Film Festival - Silver Award • 1995 -
Chicago International Film Festival - Silver Hugo • 1995 - New York International Festivals Award • 1996 - Cindy Awards - Two Bronze, three Blue Ribbons
Reception Have you ever thought about taking a vacation that was a little different from all your other trips? asked
Orange County Bicyclist. ''The thing that sets this travel video apart from all others is the touring and video footage that features mountain bikers exploring nine different countries of the world. The main stars in this video are a husband and wife team who have connected with other serious cyclists in various corners of the world and who act as their expert tour guides. We tested this video with several staff people and biker friends and the results were impressive: the whole group was unanimous in praising the video for taking them into interesting, little known areas of the world that the tour books don't mention. They also came out of the viewing inspired to want to visit one or more of the places described.'' In 1994,
Post Magazine wrote, "[This show] features several ''world's firsts'': first Westerners to travel (and bicycle) through the Himalayas of North Sikkim, India; first to ride a mountain bike 60 feet under the Pacific Ocean, and in a semi-active volcano in Costa Rica; first to document nine-times world's champion bicycle trials rider,
Ot Pi, performing stunts near and around historical landmarks in Athens, Greece." In 1995, VeloNews reviewed the documentary, saying Yeah, okay, so who wouldn't want to do it, right? Pack up all your cares and woes, go and tweak your boss's nose, bye, bye, day shift. Really. It's the great American dream. Pack up and ship out for parts unknown with your significant other and your bicycle. What a rush. It's life. It's adventure. It's your chance to finally learn what really
does sit just around the next corner on the best single-tracks in Canada and Great Britain and Switzerland ... or the more exotic Greece, or even more exotic Costa Rica, or - add a new level of exotica here - Tahiti or India. Come on. Who wouldn't? ... Mark Schulze and Patricia Mooney did what the rest of us merely dream of: They chased their dreams and front forks around the world and lived to shoot video about it, made a show ... and now get to write it all off ... The videography of the work is spectacular. How the crew of five videographers - one occasionally shooting from a SteadiCam - captured the shots they did is truly beyond me. There are scenes where I could swear a crane was used for effect, when, in fact, there was no way to humanly get a crane into that location. In short, it is beautifully shot. Catherine Applefeld wrote in Billboard:
This documentary/travelog is the result of the production crew meeting up with the featured husband-and-wife cycling team as they traversed the globe MTV Sports
-style in search of the best mountain bike ride on earth ... This sweeping overview provides some terrific footage of a variety of landscape, as well as plenty of action for cycling enthusiasts. Billboard also said ''Mark Schulze and Patty Mooney can knock you out with a real sense of "wow," including highlights of trials champ Ot Pi doin' his thang at the Parthenon and a treacherous helmet-cam descent into a volcano.'' Video Columnist, Robert J. Hawkins, penned a story about
Full Cycle in
The San Diego Union-Tribune Sunday supplement called Night & Day, saying Back in February 1993, we introduced you to filmmakers Mark Schulze and Patricia Mooney, a husband and wife who share many passions, among them mountain biking and travel. They were even married in a San Diego County park, on mountain bikes. Schulze and Mooney were in the early stages of a fantastic and improbable project back then. They wanted to travel the world in search of the best mountain-biking trails. They would, of course, film their odyssey and turn it into a documentary. It took three years, a quarter-million dollars and 75 hours of Betacam SP tape footage -- but they completed their quest ... Schulze and Mooney came back with more than spectacular scenery, of which there is an abundance here. They manage, too, to convey the joy they experience in getting out on two wheels on an open trail. They've created an
Endless Summer for the mountain-biking crowd. OCSD Film & Video News wrote a front-page story about New & Unique Videos in its November 1995 issue, mentioning "movie star James Hong of
Blade Runner and ''Wayne's World II'' and his family take viewers on a fun-filled mountain bike ride through their Hollywood Hills neighborhood." Of
World Odyssey, Video Alert wrote ''
Full Cycle: A World Odyssey" is the "Endless Summer" of mountain bike videos as Mark Schulze and Patty Mooney crisscross the globe in search of, not the perfect wave, but the perfect trail. ... at the heart of Full Cycle
is a freewheeling love story seemingly straight out of a Hollywood screenplay. Yes, Mark and Patty really did get married on their mountain bikes. The Rotarian noted in 1996 that Schulze and Mooney "combined their interests and talents" to create the
World Odyssey and that "It's a good mix of adventure and geography." In May of 1996, Marie Loggia wrote in
Outdoor Action: Close to two hours on mountain biking. First of all, I thought, you've got to really love the sport to watch this thing. But I was wrong, even if you're not a mountain bike fanatic,
Full Cycle: A World Odyssey offers plenty of scenery. It's like a nature show combined with travel, a splash of history lesson, all mixed together with mountain biking ...
Full Cycle is the brainchild of Mark Schulze and Patty Mooney. When Schulze and Mooney married they swore to someday travel across the globe, visiting the best mountain bike trails the world has to offer. Well, as you can see, they did it ... This can definitely be labeled one of those
wish videos. It would be wonderful to ride around the beautiful volcanoes and lush tropical banana fields of Costa Rica. In Switzerland, the scenery became more serene as they rode the ''world's finest single track'' around the eastern end of Lake Geneva. Imagine riding around the Matterhorn (the original, not Disney recreation) at 14,690 feet! A sidebar in
New Woman Magazine asked
Fascinated by the idea of mountain biking through some rough but exotic terrains? "Full Cycle: A World Odyssey" takes video viewers to nine great destinations that emphasize biking, with an overview of local sites and their histories ... The two-part video features superb views, from deep in the Grand Canyon to the trails of the Matterhorn to scuba biking in Costa Rica. ==References==