The idea behind “The Trip” movies…
Two fiftyish, English “mates”, Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon,
one of them more successful in his career than the other (you can tell by which
one you’ve heard of), the other more domestically comfortable (you can tell via
the process of elimination), travel by car together, visiting “high end”
regional restaurants in various countries and eating in them. Because why would you go there, if you were
not going to eat? You’d be better off
visiting historical landmarks, where at least you could learn something. Although,
unless there was an accompanying gift shop selling stale sandwiches or packaged
pound cake, you would unlikely get anything to eat.
Okay, that’s me, rambling.
Which is pretty much what the two fiftyish, English “mates” do, as they
motor meanderingly from restaurant to restaurant.
There have been three “The Trip” movies, all products of a previously
produced English television series, whose episodes were subsequently edited and
turned into movies.
Years ago, when it was harder to take pictures – the cameras
were heavier, you had to sprocket in the film, you were unable to “correct”
shots you are unhappy with afterwards, you kept losing the strap – I learned
the simple secret to taking quality photographs.
You throw out the bad ones.
Same thing with the improvisational comedy of “The Trip”
movies. You take six hours of television
material, winnow it down to a third of that length, and then suddenly in the movie,
“Every one is a winner!”
(The excluded stuff littering the cutting room floor, going,
“Comedy’s only a matter of opinion,
you know.”)
Of the three incarnations of “The Trip” – wait. Let me first make this comment.
You make a TV series where you go to Five-Star restaurants,
sampling their magnificent cuisine. Which
I am sure they did not have to pay for, or leave a tip even. In fact, they were probably paid handsomely
to do the TV series. Then, without further
time or involvement on your part, edited versions of those TV shows are
transformed into movies, which you are then paid for once again.
Are these guys geniuses, or what? They probably got free
gas for the car!
Okay, where was I after that envious harangue? Oh, yeah.
Of the three incarnations of “The Trip” movies – the first
one set in Northern England, the second, in Italy, and the third outing in
Spain – I enjoyed this last offering the least because in the first two movies
– and I have never said this before when distinguishing movies – I liked the
food better.
Apparently, a lot of haute
Spanish cuisine includes crustaceans and other anemones culled from the bottom
of the sea, which, for reasons never clearly delineated to me, the Old
Testament insistently frowns upon Jews eating. Plus, the prepared delicacies, despite what
they experienced in the kitchen, appear like, at any moment, they could slither
resuscitatedly off of the plate.
What I was then left with, in terms of my appreciation of
the Trip to Spain was the impressive
inventiveness of the improvised comedy.
Now…
Each of us has his or her own “Limit of Endurance” when it
comes to dueling imitations of Roger Moore, as well as of Michael Caine, at
various stages of his career, both of which Coogan and Brydon are remarkably
adept at. (Though they may be seriously
dating themselves in their mimical selections, and dating me in the process, because I know exactly who they are “doing.”)
Because they were visiting Spain, which for a time was dominated
by the Moors, the mere mention of the word “Moors” triggers an unsolicited barrage
of Roger Moore imitations. Though the two comedians consistently nail
the actor’s “casual insouciance” – after a while, they venture perilously close
to “Enough, already!” Although “tediously annoying” may have
actually been the point. The thing is, I
am not at all interested in that
point. Not to mention, amused.
Compensation arrives, however, courtesy of other inspired
comedy imaginings. Of which, I shall
happily recount two:
Since Spain is the historic home of the Spanish Inquisition,
the two comedians do a routine, based on the lesser appreciated attribute of
“The Rack”, which is that, while you were unquestionably being tortured, you
were concomitantly also being made taller.
Coogan and Brydon turn the hideous “Rack Experience” into a
typical “Game Show”, in which the unctuous compere
(host) asks the contestant, “You have now reached the ‘Five-foot-nine’ plateau. Would you like to go for ‘Five-nine-and-a-half?’”
And the contestant enthusiastically
shouts, “Yes!”
The other bit – this one teeters on the border of bad taste
– as if “The Rack” material doesn’t –
but I have to admit, it still made me laugh.
In some “I no longer remember” context, Brydon pretends to be hard of
hearing, and Coogan, trying to drive his “mate” bonkers, moves his lips without
actually saying anything while
simultaneously emitting a screeching, high-pitched, “EEEEEEEE” sound, his “hard of hearing” companion, struggling to eliminate
the “feedback” from his defective “hearing aid.”
If such comedy silliness is not exactly your cup of tea, Trip to Spain also includes magnificent
landscapes, Iberian “beach babes” and garlicky sanddabs. (Which I myself have never tasted but the
culinary travelers went, “Mmmm.”)
Watching gifted comedians working “off the top of their
heads” – there is nothing better when it’s good. Jonathan Winters. Robin Williams. Eddie Izzard.
And Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, with the help of assiduous editing.
At its best, Trip to
Spain is as rewarding as its predecessors.
It’s just that I think they eat Nemo.
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