SUPERDRIVING THE FJORDS
Hollywood Thrills & Nordic Elegance
OCTOBER 5TH – 9TH 2026
THE FJORD ODYSSEY
A Cinematic Drive Through
The Edge Of The World
There are drives that take you from one place to another — and then there are drives that transport you entirely. This is The Fjord Odyssey — a cinematic expedition through Norway’s untamed frontier, where mountain meets sea, glass meets sky, and every bend feels like a frame from a film. Behind the wheel of a sleek fleet of all-electric Porsche Taycans, you’ll trace the routes of Hollywood’s most iconic productions — Mission: Impossible. Succession. James Bond. But this is not a recreation. It’s a reimagination.Across five epic days, your convoy will carve along the Atlantic’s edge, glide through glacier-hewn valleys, cross sea-spanning bridges, and drive alongside fjord reflections so still they blur the line between road and sky. Each day unfolds like an act in a film — with bold openings, quiet middles, and unforgettable finales.Helicopters replace round trips. Private fjord boats return you to dinner tables few have ever seen. One night is black-tie beneath the cliffs. The next, a fire-lit meal of Arctic cod beside the sea. No spectators. No crowds. Only movement, mood, and mastery.
ELECTRIC ELEGANCE, CINEMATIC POWER
The Porsche Taycan: Built For The Fjords, Born For The Screen
There are few cars that feel purpose-built for the drama of the Norwegian landscape — and fewer still that bring such harmony between performance and place. The Porsche Taycan is one of them.
With its razor-sharp responsiveness, sculpted silhouette, and all-electric powertrain, the Taycan delivers speed with serenity — an exhilarating drive that doesn’t break the silence. In a land of echoing valleys, glassy fjords, and soaring granite walls, that silence matters. It sharpens every sense. It turns every corner into a moment.
Chosen not just for its performance, but for its poetry, the Taycan glides through this cinematic journey like a lead character: fast, sleek, and whisper-quiet.
Think Bond without the noise. Mission: Impossible without the engine growl. This isn’t about roaring through nature — it’s about fusing with it.
Because in Norway, power doesn’t shout. It glides.
ACT ONE
The Arrival
The Opening Scene: Forest, Fire & Fjord
Arrival → Transfer → Union Oye Hotel
The journey begins with arrival into Ålesund, Norway’s Art Nouveau coastal gateway. From here, the convoy sets off toward the Norangsdal Valley, following fjord-lined roads that narrow gradually into dramatic alpine terrain. A ferry crossing becomes the first quiet interlude — mountains rising steeply from still water as the fleet continues deeper into the landscape.
By late afternoon, Union Øye appears at the mouth of the valley — a legendary 19th-century fjord hotel framed by vertical granite walls and snow-tipped peaks. Once a retreat for explorers, royalty, and writers, it remains one of Norway’s most storied properties.
Evening unfolds in the glass conservatory and candlelit dining rooms. A refined Nordic dinner highlights Arctic seafood, foraged herbs, and seasonal produce, accompanied by aquavit and local wines. Outside, the fjord reflects the final light of the day. The tone is set: this is a journey of contrast — movement and stillness, power and refinement.
A legendary 19th-century retreat nestled at the mouth of the Norangsdal Valley, Union Øye is not simply a hotel — it’s a living storybook. Once the refuge of explorers, royals, and romantics, today it remains one of Norway’s most iconic heritage stays, lovingly restored with every modern comfort.
Each suite is individually styled — rich in color and detail, with antique furnishings, deep velvet fabrics, and clawfoot tubs. Many overlook snowcapped peaks or tranquil garden courtyards. No two rooms are the same — but all are built to slow time.
Evenings here are cinematic: aperitifs in the glass conservatory, dinners by candlelight, and live Nordic musicians echoing through the halls. Surrounded by towering cliffs and deep, glacial silence, Union Øye offers not just rest — but reverie.
Overnight | Union Oye: The Legend In The Valley
ACT TWO
Mission: Impossible — Geiranger & Dalsnibba
Mountains, Waterfalls, & Motion
Union Øye → Hellesylt → Geiranger Fjord → Dalsnibba → Loen → Return by Heli
The day opens in drifting fjord mist.
Engines hum to life as you leave Øye and guide the convoy toward Hellesylt, the road tracing still water and rising cliffs. From there, the pace shifts.
In Geiranger, you board high-performance RIB boats — low, fast, and built for precision. Within moments, you are skimming across the UNESCO-listed fjord, wind sharp against your face, spray rising in white arcs as vertical granite walls tower above you. Waterfalls plunge beside the boats. The sheer cliff face made famous by Mission: Impossible looms overhead — raw, immense, and far more dramatic in person than on screen.
Back on land, the drive resumes. The road coils upward toward Dalsnibba, each switchback revealing wider perspectives until the entire fjord lies far below, a vast ribbon of blue framed by mountain and sky.
Lunch is served high above it all — glass, altitude, and uninterrupted horizon.
By late afternoon, helicopters lift from the mountainside, carrying you above the fjords you have just carved by road and sea. From the air, the scale becomes absolute — cliffs, water, and glacier lines merging into one sweeping panorama.
You return to Øye for an evening in the Wine Gallery — stone walls, aged bottles, and stories retold with quiet satisfaction.
Land. Sea. Air.
This is the Mission: Impossible chapter — fully lived.
ACT THREE
Succession — Power & Silence in the Mountains
Cliffs, Switchbacks, And Legends In Motion
Day three is a full driving experience — deliberate, uninterrupted, and grounded in scale. The route leads first to the Troll Wall, Europe’s tallest vertical rock face, before continuing onto the legendary Trollstigen Pass. Eighteen hairpin turns climb steeply through mist and waterfalls, offering one of Scandinavia’s most iconic driving experiences.
A pause at Valldal provides space to absorb the terrain before continuing toward Juvet Landscape Hotel — the filming location of Succession’s Norwegian retreat. Here, modern glass architecture is embedded directly into forest and rock, a striking example of minimalist design against overwhelming landscape. Lunch is served within this architectural setting, reinforcing the day’s theme of restrained power and quiet dominance.
The drive continues through Norangsdal, one of Norway’s narrowest and most atmospheric valleys, before ascending to Storfjord Hotel for the evening.
Troll Wall → Trollstigen → Norangsdal → Storfjord
Tucked into a secluded pine-covered hillside above the Storfjord, this lodge-style hideaway offers the quiet grandeur of Norway in its purest form. Storfjord Hotel feels worlds away — a place where polished timber, roaring fireplaces, and floor-to-ceiling windows frame sweeping views of fjord and forest.
Each suite is a haven of warmth and design: wool throws, handcrafted Norwegian furnishings, and deep-soaking tubs that look out to endless green. The scent of juniper drifts through the air, and the silence is only broken by birdsong or the distant call of water below.
Whether stepping out for golden-hour forest walks or returning to candlelit dinners curated with foraged local ingredients, guests will feel cocooned — both by nature and Nordic hospitality.
Overnight | Storfjord: A Hidden Forest Retreat Above The Fjords
ACT FOUR
James Bond — The Atlantic Ocean Road
Sea Meets Speed — The World’s Most Iconic Coastal Road
The Atlantic Ocean Road provides the natural stage for the James Bond chapter of the journey. This dramatic stretch of highway connects small islands via sweeping bridges that rise and fall above the open sea. The convoy moves across Storseisundet Bridge and along wind-carved causeways, with the Atlantic crashing below. The drive is bold and exposed — sea meeting asphalt in spectacular fashion.
Midday brings a private coastal lunch prepared by a dedicated chef in a remote oceanfront setting. King crab, chilled champagne, and Nordic seafood are served against raw granite and open horizon.
As evening approaches, helicopters lift from the coastline for a short scenic transfer back toward Storfjord. The night concludes with a black-tie dinner in a private boathouse setting — martinis, live music, candlelight, and a distinctly Bond-inspired elegance.
Vestnes → Molde → Atlantic Ocean Road → Return by Heli
ACT FIVE
The Finale
A Farewell Written in Sky and Sea
Heli to Flatflesa Lighthouse – Private Farewell Lunch – Departure
Morning light glances off the sea as helicopters rise one final time. Your destination: Flatflesa, a private island crowned by a lone lighthouse, surrounded by endless blue.
Here, your farewell unfolds — a table set against the wind, champagne and salt air mingling, the horizon your only witness. A Michelin-trained chef prepares a final Nordic feast: sea urchin, langoustine, glacial herbs.
By late afternoon, helicopters lift once more, returning you to your flight out.
The story closes not with an ending — but with a dissolve into light.
Dates & Rates
4 Nights / 5 Days
Monday, October 5th – Friday, October 9th 2026
Total Experience Investment
€ 65,600 euro per car
(Participation for up to two guests sharing one vehicle)
The rate is structured per vehicle and includes full participation for two guests throughout the entire journey.
Accommodation Configuration:
Couple: One shared suite throughout the program.
Two Friends: Two separate rooms throughout the program, sharing one vehicle.
Solo Participant: Private participation in one vehicle; rate remains €65,600.
If joining as two friends, the individual commitment equates to €32,800 per person, based on shared vehicle participation.
This structure ensures full flexibility in how guests choose to join — while preserving the integrity of the driving experience, which is designed around one car allocation per booking.
For Inquiries
Drop us a line at: discover@alivemc.com