THE TRIP TO SPAIN: 100 minutes of laughs, travel, food in a 115-minute movie

Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan in THE TRIP TO SPAIN
In The Trip to Spain, comics Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan play caricatures of themselves assigned to a gourmet road trip, just as in The Trip and The Trip to Italy.  Both masters of impressions and improvisation, the amiable Brydon and the snootily competitive (but needy) Coogan banter their way through delectable Spanish cuisine.  One of the franchise’s running gags is Coogan’s constant name-dropping and one-upmanship, which begs Brydon to deflate him.

Brydon’s wonderful impressions of Sean Connery and Michael Caine are legendary, and Coogan is no slouch.  They do impressions of Marlon Brando and Robert Deniro, and mimic across the British acting greats John Hurt, Ian McKellen, Anthony Hopkins and Michael Holdern.  Brydon even “does” Mick Jagger doing Michael Caine and Jagger playing Shakespeare’s Shylock.

In one of the funniest bits, a lunchtime reference to the “Moors in Spain” sparks a Rob Brydon marathon of ROGER Moore riffs; as Coogan and their companions try in vain to change the subject, Brydon is hilariously unstoppable.

There are plenty of other laughs, too, as  Coogan tries to pronounces the French name “Aurore” and Brydon quips that the Spanish Inquisition was launched by a “Catalytic Converter”.  They even refuse to pass up the obvious joke about Herb Alpert’s Spanish Flea.

As in the other Trip movies, the travel and food porn is exquisite.  They cross Spain from the Basque country, through the dinosaur sites of Rioja, the Don Quixote heritage of  La Mancha, the streets of Cuenca and the marvels of Granada, ending in Malaga.   I didn’t notice any green vegetables until their fifth day of eating (always fine by me).  (However, Spain’s ubiquitous jamón doesn’t show up until their final day.)

Frankly, Brydon’s and Coogan’s improvisations are reason enough to make (and see) one of these movies.  Unfortunately,  someone felt the need to focus the final 15 minutes of The Trip to Spain on the contrast between Brydon’s happly family life and Coogan’s disconnected loneliness and his career and personal insecurities.  Blaaaaaaaaaah.  Snooooooze.

So it’s simple:  go see The Trip to Spain and, when the characters say goodbye to each other in Malaga – leave the theater.

DVD/Stream of the Week: THE TRIP TO ITALY – wit, more wit and amazing food

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in THE TRIP TO ITALY
Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in THE TRIP TO ITALY

The smart and hilarious The Trip to Italy showcases the improvisational wit of Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, along with some serious tourism/foodie porn. As in The Trip, the two British comics are sent off on a hedonistic road trip to review spectacular restaurants – this time in Italy’s most stunningly beautiful destinations. Along the way, they needle each other and virtually any occurrence can trigger a very funny riff. As in The Trip, they compete for the funniest Michael Caine impression; but this time, their funniest impression is of a harried Assistant Director trying to give notes to the mask-wearing Tom Hardy in The Dark Knight Rises.

And – if you enjoy travel and fine dining – the restaurant scenes are unsurpassed. The Trip to Italy is available on DVD from Netflix and streaming from Netflix, iTunes, YouTube, Google Play and Xbox Video.

THE TRIP TO ITALY: wit, more wit and amazing food

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in THE TRIP TO ITALY
Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in THE TRIP TO ITALY

The smart and hilarious The Trip to Italy showcases the improvisational wit of Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, along with some serious tourism/foodie porn.   As in The Trip, the two British comics are sent off on a hedonistic road trip to review spectacular restaurants – this time in Italy’s most stunningly beautiful destinations.  Along the way, they needle each other and virtually any occurrence can trigger a very funny riff.  As in The Trip, they compete for the funniest Michael Caine impression; but this time, their funniest impression is of a harried Assistant Director trying to give notes to the mask-wearing Tom Hardy in The Dark Knight Rises.

And – if you enjoy travel and fine dining – the restaurant scenes are unsurpassed.

The Trip: duelling Michael Caines

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon take a foodie road trip through the north of England.  Brydon is a compulsive impressionist, and he speaks more often in the voices of Woody Allen, Al Pacino, Anthony Hopkins, Richard Burton, et al than in his own.  That’s entertaining, but when Coogan provokes a duel with their Michael Caine and Sean Connery impressions, it gets even more funny.

Along the way, they dine at some pretty tasty looking restaurants, but always with an edge:  “It has the consistency of snot, but it tastes great”.  There is definitely some food porn, but not quite enough to make my list of 10 Food Porn Movies.