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14[[quoteright:350:[[Film/DoctorStrange2016 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sl_1.png]]]]
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16At the absolute peak of the Himalayas--and/or some other FarEast mountain--there exists a city of mystical monasteries positively packed to the gills with wise Buddhist monks, who would train both mind and spirit, and share their knowledge with lost and weary travelers on how to cast off their ego, become one with the universe, and attain true enlightenment. Also, to [[AllMonksKnowKungFu punch through people's faces]].
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18Despite being stuck up in a bunch of cold mountains, Shangri-La is usually shown as an idyllic and beautiful place, full of rare flora and fauna, and tended by bald monks in orange robes who beat gongs and train in Martial Arts. Alternatively, it may be shown in a more realistic (though no less idealised) light, being cold and uncomfortable to those who are used to living in major city centers.
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20Surrounding Shangri-La is an endless expanse of beautiful but dangerous mountain peaks, untouched by the sprawl of civilization or tourism. Sometimes [[ScalingTheSummit getting to the village or monastery]] requires the mountaineer to be near death, though a special Sherpa with secret knowledge is just as common -- often, the VanishingVillage is only accessible at certain times. Other times, it's just a case of turning a corner. Either way, there are ''definitely no tourists''.
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22Shangri-La ([[InconsistentSpelling sometimes spelled without the dash]]) comes from the 1933 novel ''Literature/LostHorizon'' by James Hilton. It is likely a variation on "Shambala" (aka [[InconsistentSpelling Sambhalah, Shamballa, or Xiangbala]]), the [[Myth/TibetanMythology Asian mythical kingdom]]. Depictions are almost always based on Tibet, with the monkish religion a [[TheThemeParkVersion highly watered-down]] variant of Lamaist Buddhism.
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24A hiding place for many a {{Utopia}}. Yet finding it and getting in is usually a lot easier than getting out. Often the destination of an EastwardEndeavor.
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26Expect the protagonist to encounter a [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Yeti]], who can be either friendly ''or'' violently hostile.
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28Not to be confused with the light novel/anime series ''Literature/ShangriLa'', or the old 1960s all-girl band which is called The Shangri-La''s'', in the plural.
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30----
31!!Examples:
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33[[foldercontrol]]
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35[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
36* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'': This is where Zeppeli learned Ripple, a SupernaturalMartialArts [[ReviveKillsZombie highly effective against the undead]]. In a major subversion of [[HiddenElfVillage how this trope usually goes]], characters from Shangri-La later appear and have an important role in the story. [[spoiler:Including a major villain during Part 2.]]
37* ''Manga/UshioAndTora'', Hyo states that Tohua Yuan, the mystic forest forever shrouded in springtime and falling flowers, is also known as "Shangri-La". Rather than a city, it host a small community of taoists immortals but is also located next to the infamous Guishan (Ghost Mountain), a massive barren mountain which is the nest of many evil monsters who desire to feed on the inhabitants of Tohua Yuan.
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40[[folder:Comic Books]]
41* In ''[[ComicBook/AthenaVoltaire Athena Voltaire and the Brotherhood of Shambalha]]'', Athena's visit to Tibet naturally entails visiting a hidden monastery where ancient wisdom can be obtained. The Nazis are after it too.
42* ''ComicBook/BlackDynamite'': The majority of Issue #3 is set in a mountainside Buddhist monastery in Tibet.
43* ''ComicBook/{{BPRD}}'':
44** A yeti-guarded monastery (in the part of the Urals above the Arctic circle) know as Agartha plays an important part in the plot, being the place where Liz Sherman learns to control her powers. And the first ''BPRD'' story, ''Hollow Earth'' kicks off when this monastery gets invaded by subterranean monsters (note that the "original" Agartha was supposed to be underground).
45** A similar monastery serves as [[YellowPeril Memnan Saa]]'s base of operations. In fact, it was central to his rise to power, as that was the place where he first learned to harness the powers of the ancient Hyperborean civilization.
46* In ''Franchise/TheDCU'', fighters travel to the city of Nanda Parbat in Tibet, where they learn alongside wise monks. Also, there is no death there. Which makes it really suck when a guy dies on the doorstep.
47** In ''ComicBook/FiftyTwo'', Rene Montoya tries to save Victor Sage from his fatal incurable cancer by taking him to Nanda Parbat, but it is an unmappable location that most seekers never find, and Vic dies just before she is rescued by the monks. She becomes ComicBook/TheQuestion to honor his legacy and that he dedicated the last year of his life to helping her find her feet after her own life went sideways and she became an alcoholic to cope.
48** ComicBook/RichardDragon has spent a lot of time soul searching in Nanda Parbat, and other heroes who travel there often end up under his tutelage while there.
49** In his quest for immortality, [[Characters/BatmanRasAlGhul Ra's al Ghul]] has sought to find, conquer and study Nanda Parbat. In ''ComicBook/Robin1993'', he sends his assassins to kill off the families who each hold part of the "map" to the place and steal their knowledge -- however, Nanda Parbat has little to offer to those who are not pure of heart and is well defended against the kind of threat Ras poses.
50** During the year she spent missing, ComicBook/WonderWoman was in Nanda Parbat, trying to decide what she should become in order to be true to herself but avoid situations in which she's forced to kill, as she had to when facing [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 Medusa]] and [[ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis Max Lord]]. [[ComicBook/WonderGirl Cassie]] chews Diana out for leaving without telling her and Donna what she was doing when they meet again in ''ComicBook/WonderWoman2006'', as Donna is Diana's sister and has just about given her up as dead before her own apparent demise.
51* ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'':
52** The Creator/CarlBarks Uncle Scrooge comic "Tralla La" is a satirical take on the idea of a moneyless utopia; the story also incidentally bears some similarity to ''Film/TheGodsMustBeCrazy'' (totally coincidental, given that the comic was published 27 years before that movie came out). It was later adapted into a ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' episode. The story revolves around Scrooge accidentally introducing the concept of scarcity to the society with the bottle caps from his medicine bottles (Tralla La does not have any native metal, all tools are made of wood, stone or clay), and when he tries to fix his mistake, he ends up flooding the place with bottlecaps instead.
53** Creator/DonRosa did a sequel to the comic, in which it is revealed that Tralla La is in fact [[spoiler: Xanadu, the place described in Creator/SamuelTaylorColeridge's poem ''Kubla Khan''.]] Also, the Ducks unintentionally bring big trouble into peaceful Tralla La. ''Again''. It reveals that Tralla La is also the hiding place of the treasury of Kublai Khan, unbeknownst to anyone alive, as the treasure is hidden in the underground reservoir that keeps Tralla La from flooding.
54* In ''ComicBook/TheFurtherAdventuresOfIndianaJones'' #18, Indy and Marion find themselves in the hidden city of Ra-Lundi high in the Himalayas (drawn to resemble Shangri-La from ''Film/LostHorizon''). The city is built around a MagicMeteor that confers immortality upon those who dwell in the city. However, any who spend more that day within the warmth of the stone become dependent upon it and cannot pass outside the gorge around the city without suffering unbearable agony.
55* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'':
56** Tibet is the one-stop-shopping place for all your superpower needs.
57*** Both ComicBook/DoctorStrange and Doctor Druid learned the mystic arts at Kamar-Taj.
58*** ComicBook/IronFist developed both his [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower martial arts skill]] (via TrainingFromHell) and his mystical [[KiManipulation iron-fist technique]] (via absorbing a dragon's heart) in K'un L'un. As one would expect, it's full of {{Martial Pacifist}}s who will ''ruin the shit'' of anyone who goes there looking for trouble. Said city is loosely based on the mythical land mentioned in ''Literature/LostHorizon'' (see below) but is Marvelized as an [[FantasyKitchenSink extra-dimensional city whose gateway leads to Earth, which was founded by the crew of a crashed spaceship]]. With apostrophes. Bonus points for said gateway only opening for a short period of time every fifteen years or so, effectively making this one a VanishingVillage.
59*** Please note that neither of the above had anything to do with [[Characters/MarvelComicsDoctorDoom Doctor Doom]], though -- that was just a random temple that failed to realize that the guy they rescued from the snow was a megalomaniac.
60** Attilan, the home city of ''ComicBook/TheInhumans'', is located in the Himalayan mountains. While it isn't entirely this trope, some of the Inhumans (especially Karnak) use SupernaturalMartialArts.
61** The ComicBook/SilverSurfer comes from a planet called Zenn-La, which is populated by PerfectPacifistPeople.
62* In Creator/HowardChaykin's comic book series based on ''ComicBook/TheShadow'', a sympathetic soldier-for-hire takes up both the Shadow alias and the Lamont Cranston identity when the real Cranston threatens to violently exploit Shambala.
63* ''Franchise/{{Tintin}}'': One of these villages appears in ''[[Recap/TintinTintinInTibet Tintin in Tibet]]''. For bonus points, it includes an airplane crash and [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti a yeti]]. However, the monastery is in a realistic portrayal of Tibet -- it's just that ''one'' monk has visions (which is [[PsychicDreamsForEveryone not that special]], as the story begins with Tintin having one himself). Hergé also apparently believed that yetis really exist and did quite a bit of research, e.g., talking to the French mountaineer Maurice Herzog, who claimed to have seen yeti tracks himself.
64* In a story from the ''Franchise/TombRaider'' comics, Lara Croft finds Shangri-La. However, she discovers that [[spoiler:nobody can leave, and those who try are turned into yeti-like monsters that guard its walls. Lara brings an old caretaker from her childhood to Shangri-La, in exchange for her own release]].
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67[[folder:Comic Strips]]
68* ''Collegium Magikos'' in the Himalayas in ''ComicStrip/MandrakeTheMagician.''
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder:Fan Fiction]]
72* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'' has a more realistic version of this in Gorakhnath's sanctuary in the sequel. It's in a beautiful valley in the Himalayas (India, specifically), it has a shrine, and there's at least one acolyte (a [[SuperSoldier superpowered]] ex ChildSoldier). However, the valley is not noted as being particularly more beautiful or mystical than any around it, it's noted as being very cold (especially in December), and Gorakhnath himself mostly just looks like a farmer in late middle age. Additionally, while he's willing to teach, that willingness only extends to those present to actually learn (such as Harry, at Strange's request), rather than just boost their 'spiritual' cred. In the latter case, as the narration notes, 'even the most enlightened of souls is not immune to the temptation to give a tourist a thick ear to match their thick skull.'
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75[[folder:Film -- Animation]]
76* In ''WesternAnimation/ChillOutScoobyDoo'', during their ice-cold adventure, Scooby-Doo and Shaggy discover Shangri-La, which contains crystals that the bad guy wanted.
77* ''WesternAnimation/MissingLink'' is about two explorers and a Sasquatch who is TheLastOfHisKind travelling across the world to find Shangri-La, located in the Himalayas which home to a population of unfriendly Yetis.
78[[/folder]]
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80[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
81* ''Film/BatmanBegins'' sends Bruce Wayne to the mountain commune of Nanda Parbat to learn combat and stealth from the League of Shadows. Then after his training, he finds out they're all {{Knight Templar}}s and forces his way out of it, then comes back to Gotham City and becomes Batman.
82* The titular hero from ''Film/BulletProofMonk'' hails from a Shangri-La-style Tibet, and uses his ancient wisdom to school a cocky American pickpocket.
83* ''Film/DoctorStrange2016'' has Kamar-Taj -- though unlike most, it's HiddenInPlainSight in Kathmandu (or at least, the main doorway is), with the entrance being a rundown door that's directly contrasted with the flashier temples across the street. While it is a beautiful mountainous landscape, it also has Wi-Fi,[[note]]In a self-referential joke, the password is "Shamballa"[[/note]] the MagicLibrarian (Wong) listens to Music/{{Beyonce}} on his iPod, and the mystic arts are explained in terms of spells and magic, but also as programs using extradimensional energy to achieve various effects.
84* The Creator/EddieMurphy vehicle ''Film/TheGoldenChild''. Chandler Jarrell and Kee Nang go to Tibet in order to retrieve the Ajanti Dagger. They must travel on foot through the snow-capped mountains to reach the monastery where the Dagger is kept.
85* In ''Film/TheImaginariumOfDoctorParnassus'', the titular character spends time studying with remote monks in a fantastical Shangri-La, where he presumably learns his mystical powers.
86** At the start of the story, he is the ''abbot'' of the monks. He is tempted by [[{{Satan}} Mr. Nick]], and sets out to the world to prove that creativity and goodwill can overcome people's base urges.
87* The first film in ''Film/TheLibrarian'' series uses this trope: it has the heroes (and villain) search for and visit Shangri-La in the Himalayas during their quest to find the other two missing parts of TheSpearOfDestiny. It is, given the movie in question, probably not entirely surprising that it is an improbably warm, sunny and idyllic place filled with Buddhist monks and luscious green landscaping, despite literally being surrounded by deadly-cold ice and snow. The monks also have a giant mechanical Buddha statue that attacks the bad guy.
88* ''Film/TheMummyTombOfTheDragonEmperor'' features the idealistic version. Also yetis.
89* ''Film/TheShadow'' opens with Lamont Cranston as a vicious opium lord in (apparently) Tibet; he is reformed and taught the mystic arts of projective telepathy by a lama.
90* ''[[Film/ShangriLaNearExtinction Shangri-La: Near Extinction]]'' is set AfterTheEnd, where a group of survivors tries finding the titular location while being pursued by monsters and an insane cult.
91* The heroes of ''Film/SkyCaptainAndTheWorldOfTomorrow'' go to Shangri-La in 1939, probably inspired by the novel ''Lost Horizon'', described below. Given a tragic edge in that the Shangri-La monks take care of a man made sick from radiation poisoning.
92* In ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'', the last refuge of the mutants in 2023 is an abandoned temple or monastery atop some windswept mountains in China.
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95[[folder:Gamebooks]]
96* ''Literature/LaSagaDuPretreJean'' is a French gamebook series with Prester John as the main character, looking for a way to reach Shangri-La and live immortal and happy. In each book, he travels through a different country (and sometimes timeline) in order to find information on the city.
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99[[folder:Literature]]
100* ''Literature/TheBrotherhoodOfTheConch'' has Silver Valley, home of the titular brotherhood, a hidden valley in the Himalayas where it's always summer, extinct plants flourish, and various magical objects help the Healers do their work. Silver Valley can only be accessed by passing several magic obstacles and then entering an entrance in the rocks that only opens if the Healers will it.
101* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' has "Enlightenment Country" in the Hubland mountains, which is packed to the gills with different sects of monks, including the History Monks, the Monks of Cool, the Yen Buddhists (if money is the root of all evil, then the best way to reduce evil is keeping as much of it away from people), and the Listening Monks (and the occasional yeti, a variant of troll). What's more, sometimes young monks will leave their monasteries to seek enlightenment in the big city, because according to Pratchett "Wisdom is the one thing that looks bigger the farther away it is."
102* Shambhala in ''Literature/EmperorMolluskVsTheSinisterBrain'' is a secret acropolis hidden away in the Himalayas where the monks who live there live in quiet meditation, philosophy and martial artistry. They also possess an engine that harnesses unlimited energy (named "molluskotrenic" when Emperor Mollusk found out about it) that is now used to generate unlimited electricity for the entire Earth. [[spoiler:By the time Mollusk and Zala make there way there, The Brain had enslaved the population with mind-control implants and turned them into his personal army.]]
103* ''Literature/Grandmaster2005'' by Warren Murphy and Molly Cochran had Rashimpur, a quintessential example of this trope complete with requisite MightyWhitey.
104* In Creator/ChristopherMoore's ''Literature/LambTheGospelAccordingToBiff'', a teenage Jesus travels to one of these with his best friend Biff. Yes, ''that'' [[MessianicArchetype Jesus]].
105* OlderThanTelevision: The trope takes its name from the 1933 novel ''Literature/LostHorizon'', which featured the fictional village of Shangri-La in the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunlun_Mountains Kun-Lun Mountains]] (a real place, but also an ancient myth known as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunlun_(mythology) Five Elements Mountain]])) and inspired numerous takeoffs.
106** ''Lost Horizon'' itself is based on a real-life legend of the lost valley of ''Shamballa'', which really is supposed to be like this trope. The legend is used by such western mystics as Madame Blavatsky and T. Lobsang Rampa, who claim secret knowledge from old Tibet. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_David-N%C3%A9el Explorer-scholars wrote several books with accurate depictions of the real places and people, with details on their traditional beliefs.]]
107** The myth of Shamballa goes back centuries since a bunch of Jesuit priests visited the Buddhist kingdom thought to be Shamballa back in the 17th century and described it as a paradisaical, serene place where no living things were harmed. The king was especially tolerant of the Jesuits and allowed them to build a church there. Unfortunately, a rival [[RealityIsUnrealistic Buddhist kingdom sacked Shamballa]] when they found out the king was letting in Jesuits.
108* Creator/ArthurCClarke's short story "The Nine Billion Names of God" is about Tibetan monks purchasing a computer to help them calculate the aforementioned names so that the universe may achieve its purpose and [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt be destroyed by God]].
109* The ''Literature/NomesTrilogy'' book ''Truckers'' has the Klothians, a mystical society of Store nomes who live on the top floor of the Store, and get their food from the staffroom rather than the delicatessen (meaning they live on tea and yoghurt).
110* Shangri La appears also in ''The Secret of Dr. Honigberger'', an 1940 novella by the Romanian writer Mircea Eliade, but under the name of Shambala rather. The plot centres around the real life 19th-century physician Johann Martin Honigberger, who disappeared in India while searching for the invisible kingdom of Shambhala.
111* In ''Radio/TheShadow'' pulp novels, the Shadow learned the power to cloud men's minds in Shamballa.
112* ''Literature/SpaceGlass'': Oracle Mountain is an ancient archive built upon a massive mountain and maintained by oracles.
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115[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
116* In Season 2 of ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'', the Inhumans have a retreat in the Chinese mountains called Lai Xi, translated as Afterlife. Lai Xi is so remote that access is only permitted by way of the Inhumans' teleporter, one of the few who knows its precise location. While most Inhumans live ordinary lives around the world, they spend time at Lai Xi to train, interact with others who know their secret, and escape to a safe place when needed.
117* The protagonists of ''Series/TheChampions1968'' have their plane shot down over a Shangri-La, and the wise and powerful locals heal them and incidentally give them superpowers.
118* In an episode of ''Series/TheLibrarians2014'', Shangri-La is revisited after Flynn's last time there (see the Film section). It has been restored to its glory days thanks to the Monkey King, who trains Stone in martial arts. A magic items collector tries to take control of the city by capturing the Monkey King's staff, but the Librarians manage to defeat him and restore Monkey's control. Also, thanks to Jenkins's [[PortalDoor Back Door]], going to Shangri-La is as simple as taking a step from the Annex.
119* ''Series/NoReservations'' actually went to one of the Tibetan villages that renamed themselves Shangri-la (see Real Life below), and mentions the portrayal in ''Literature/LostHorizon''. Even if it wasn't really Shangri-La, it's got monks, yaks, snow, mountains, and friendly natives, and is quite beautiful in its way.
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122[[folder:Music]]
123* Shangri-La Shower by [[Anime/LoveLive µ's]].
124* Japanese rock artist Acid Black Cherry wrote a song called ''Shangri-La'', in which he not only sings about a utopia of life and light but also about overcoming tragedy. Many clues in the lyrics and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAabwJ3Vt5I music video]] point to him silently dedicating the song to everyone affected by the 2011 Tohoku disaster.
125* Music/DenkiGroove has a song called "Shangri-La" that sounds just as heavenly as the name suggests.
126* Music/InsaneClownPosse use Shangri-La as an allegory for Heaven; it features heavily in several of their lyrics, was the subtitle for their album ''[[Music/TheWraithShangiLa Thy Wraith]]'', and they even put out a Quest for Shangri-La board game.
127* Music/TheRutles wrote a song about Shangri-La, a place where all day long the sky is blue and no one has a lot to do.
128* ''Shambala'' by Three Dog Night, unsurprisingly appearing in ''Series/{{Lost}}'', listened to by one of Dharma Initiative worker in his van.
129-->''Everyone is helpful, everyone is kind on the road to Shambala...''
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131
132[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
133* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'': Qaf, the Heaven-Violating Spear, is a [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils demon-prince]]-slash-[[GeniusLoci genius-loci]] Shangri-La. If you climb it/him, you'll eventually find the wisdom you're looking for. Since he's a demon, things are far from peaceful on his slope. It's also implied that he's infinitely tall.
134** The Cult of the Illuminated invoked this trope for one of their training camps, creating a bucolic, farm-ringed tower protected by arctic mountains. The idea was to test and refine prospective pilgrims' virtue: insufficiently determined seekers will never reach the tower at all.
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137[[folder:Video Games]]
138* Shangri-La is one of the levels in ''VideoGame/{{Conduit 2}}''.
139* The prologue of ''VideoGame/{{Dreamfall|TheLongestJourney}}'' follows Brian Westhouse, an adventurer from Boston, who is sent to a parallel universe by the helpful monks of an unspecified Tibetan monastery.
140* ''VideoGame/DragonQuestXI'' has the very aptly named Angri-La. A temple on top of a snowy mountain inhabited by bald orange-robed monks. They have an agreement with Dundrasil to train their princes for a time when they come of age.
141* ''VideoGame/EarthBound1994'' has Dalaam, a [[FarEast far-eastern]] country located at the top of a high mountain (or floating continent). Your fourth party member, Poo, comes from this area.
142* Although it's located in a FantasyCounterpartCulture of ''Scandinavia'' of all places, the Throat of the World from ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim'' has a bit of this vibe. It's the tallest mountain on the entire continent, people regularly climb it as a form of pilgrimage, and at the very top is a secretive monastery inhabited by an order of monks that have lived on the mountain from a young age and obtained mystical powers from years of meditation. Bonus points for being guarded by a frost troll (basically the closest thing to a yeti in the game).
143* ''VideoGame/EXTRAPOWERAttackOfDarkforce'': Kanedama-kan is located deep in a mountainous part of East Asia, housing an wizened, ancient elder and an army of devoted martial artists to protect the compound.
144* Certain regions of ''VideoGame/FarCry4'''s Kyrat, particularly in the ''Valley of the Yetis'' DLC, are a twisted, DarkerAndEdgier take on the trope far from idyllic or utopian. But the mountains and breathtaking vistas, as well as isolated mountain hamlets, certainly qualify. Given how Kyrat is, as typical for ''Franchise/FarCry'' locales, a CrapsackWorld {{Qurac}} based on Nepal, but with a few Tibetan influences thrown in, this is not surprising. Interestingly, the game also has a secondary storyline (played through collecting the individual pieces of a thangka that was once on the wall of the protagonist's family homestead) which tells the story of a warrior from a long time ago searching for the ''actual'' Shangri-La.
145* In ''VideoGame/IndianaJonesAndTheInfernalMachine'', one of the parts of the titular Infernal Machine is located in Shambala in the Tian Shan mountains in Kazakhstan.
146* In ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire'', Dirge, the Spirit Monks' mountaintop fortress, was this before soldiers destroyed everyone dwelling within. Even in its ruined state, it provides a lot of impressive scenery and plot-relevant information.
147* This is one of the major areas in ''VideoGame/TheJourneymanProject 3''. Built into the side of a steep mountain pass, the monastery had advanced mechanisms to protect itself and its secrets from trespassers as well as geothermal tunnels which utilized steam to heat a greenhouse containing several now-extinct plant species. A battle between two alien races caused an avalanche, destroying the monastery.
148** Interestingly, when you first enter, you encounter a rather hostile guard with a black eye. Later on, you find out who gave him the black eye -- UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan, who came to Shangri-La to gain knowledge that would allow him to defeat his enemies. Disillusioned, he plans to leave... a day before the monastery is destroyed.
149* In ''VideoGame/MightAndMagic IV: Clouds of Xeen'', Shangri-La is an underground town. Notable because unless you know the [[PortalNetwork shortcut]], you have to fight your way through demon-filled caverns to get there.
150* ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorneySpiritOfJustice'' introduces the Kingdom of Khura'in, homeland of the Kurain school of spirit channeling that's been present for the entire series, a mountain realm with whitewashed palaces, colorful flags, devout monks, and...lots of political intrigue. They practice Khura'inism, which comes across as essentially Buddhism with touches of Islam and [[ReligionIsMagic genuinely can call on the dead]], though the actual number of people who can use spiritual power in the current day and age can be counted on one hand.
151* ''VideoGame/RaymanOrigins'' has Mystical Pique, a snowy mountain with Tibetan-style architecture, prayer flags and meditating fakirs.
152* In ''VideoGame/ShuyanSaga'', Shuyan receives a vision of pointing her towards a mountain-top temple where she can continue to learn. In addition to the terrain, people wanting to visit the temple have to contend with supernatural defences which make you FaceYourFears.
153* ''VideoGame/{{Terranigma}}'' has the town of Lhasa, whose religious leader Lord Kumari is said to be the latest of many reincarnations of a god.
154* ''VideoGame/TombRaiderII'' has the level Barkhang Monastery towards the end of the game. It is one of the biggest and most impressive levels in the game, complete with a giant statue and monks who help you fight the enemies.
155* The plot of ''VideoGame/Uncharted2AmongThieves'' centres on the search for Shambala, where the game's climax occurs. There are indeed yetis. [[spoiler: Except they're actually the human Guardians of Shambala, driven mad and super strong by eating the sap from the Tree Of Life that's also located in the city.]] The city itself mostly lies in ruins.
156* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' Mists of Pandaria introduces the snowy mountainous region of Kun-La Summit, which fittingly has the Temple of the White Tiger - the ancient training ground - and Shadow-Pan Monastery
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159[[folder:Western Animation]]
160* ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius'': Shangrillama is a cut-paste Shangri-La, only with Llamas.
161* ''WesternAnimation/{{Animalympics}}'': A canine ski-jump champion gets lost while mountain-climbing and either finds or hallucinates finding "Dogra-La", an all-doggy version of this trope.
162* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'': The Temples of the Air Nomads were inspired by this, but after the Nomads were wiped out, they fell into disrepair. Partially a subversion; the Air Temples and their locations were always known to the wider world, and the Nomads themselves traveled throughout the other nations (hence their name). It's just that their locations atop remote mountains made them very difficult to reach without the signature transport of a flying bison.
163* ''WesternAnimation/{{Cyberchase}}'': There's a cybersite called Shangri-La run by one Master Pi. Though it actually is generally peaceful and harmonious, the guards are obligated to carry out the orders of the current leader... even if that leader is [[BigBad "The Hacker"]]. And sometimes you have to play Nim with dragons for your freedom or something.
164* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'': The episode "Godfellas" features an ashram that doubles as a parabolic radio telescope.
165* ''WesternAnimation/TheIncredibleHulk1996'': Bruce Banner visited one of these to try to subdue his UnstoppableRage SuperpoweredEvilSide persona, but then of course, by the end of the episode [[StatusQuoIsGod has to release it again]].
166* ''WesternAnimation/{{Jem}}'': In the episode, "Journey to Shamgri-La", both the Holograms and the Misfits search the eponymous Shamgri-La to discover a new music.
167* ''WesternAnimation/JonnyQuestTheRealAdventures'': ''Shamballa'' appears in the episode "The Bangalore Falcon". It's a mystical land in the Indian mountains which appears every 500 years, and houses the titular blue falcon (no, not [[WesternAnimation/DynomuttDogWonder him]]), among other exotic flora and fauna, as well as the River of Eternal Life.
168* ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'': In the episode "Shangri-La-Di-Da", Shangri-La is presented as a magical spa, run by Yetis.
169* ''WesternAnimation/MiraculousLadybug'': Gradually reveals that the origin of the eponymous hero's TransformationTrinket was an AncientOrderOfProtectors sequestered away in such a place in the mountains. They were wiped out by the [[MikeNelsonDestroyerOfWorlds impulsive actions of a younger member]], but they all get restored by the heroine's WorldHealingWave ability after she defeats the monster that destroyed them.
170* ''WesternAnimation/AMissMallardMystery'': One episode, "Danger in Tibet", had one named Sagahappy, which Miss Mallard stumbled on in her search for Willard.
171* ''WesternAnimation/TaleSpin'': In the episode "Last Horizons", Baloo seeks out and discovers the mythic "Panda-La" to become famous. Then the "enlightened, peaceful" populace subverts the trope by following him back home and invading. The Chinese stereotyping in this episode was strong enough that some Chinese-Americans complained rather loudly, and the episode was [[MissingEpisode pulled from reruns]].
172** "The Gates of Shambala", A ''Tale Spin'' comic from ''Magazine/DisneyAdventures'', offers a straighter version of the trope.
173* ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'': In one episode, the Platypus brothers discover the lost city of Platy-La in their attic. (It's a ''really big'' attic.) One of them initially mistakes it for Shangri-La, even though the architecture is Greek, and it's not in the mountains, and it's ''in Australia''.
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177* There are actual cities, towns, and regions bearing the name Shangri-La in Tibet, renamed to draw tourists.
178* While mind-affecting blue flowers à la ''Film/BatmanBegins'' were (thankfully!) omitted, the real Himalayas do harbor such endangered wildlife as the snow leopard and markhor, making this one of the cooler segments of the ''Planet Earth'' documentary series. The trope's breathtaking landscapes are justified too.
179* Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts is a hotel chain that manages 66 hotels around the world.
180* [[BadassNormal Heinrich Harrer's]] memoir ''Seven Years in Tibet'' (1952) was [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome far less idealized]] compared to its 1997 Hollywood rendition - while being deeply impressed by the scenery, the nature and the architectural wonder of Potala, the way of living for RealLife Tibetans was far less idyllic than often thought.
181* UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt, when asked where the bombers used for the [[AirStrikeImpossible Doolittle Raid]] on Japan were launched from during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII,[[note]]The twin-engined Army bombers had been stripped of any unnecessary weight, loaded up with extra fuel, and launched from an aircraft carrier barely big enough for the task[[/note]] [[BlatantLies claimed that they had been launched from a base in Shangri-La.]] The U.S. Navy actually launched an aircraft carrier named the USS ''Shangri-La'' later in the war as a reference to Roosevelt's quote.
182** Roosevelt was a known fan of the novel; in addition to the quip above, he also gave the name Shangri-La to his Presidential retreat in the Appalachian Mountains of western Maryland. It's now better known as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_David Camp David]], renamed by Eisenhower after his father and grandson.
183* The alleged mystical and metaphysical qualities of Shangri-La are of great interest to ''Magazine/ForteanTimes''. This magazine treats hoaxes and delusions as interesting phenomena in their own right and worthy of discussion and analysis.
184* There is a place named [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shangri-La_(Titan) Shangri-La]] on Titan, the [[UsefulNotes/TheMoonsOfSaturn largest moon of Saturn]]. However [[MostWritersAreHuman from a human perspective]] it is an aversion of this trope, being a vast plain covered with dark dunes made of water ice and hydrocarbons.
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