The Trip
- TV sitcom
- Sky One / BBC Two / Sky Atlantic
- 2010 - 2020
- 24 episodes (4 series)
Improvised comedy with Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon on a series of road trips. Also features Rebecca Johnson, Claire Keelan, Margo Stilley, Marta Barrio and Timothy Leach
Press clippings Page 11
The Trip to Italy, BBC Two, review
Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon's follow-up to 2010's The Trip is infantile, inspired, and as inconsequential as it was inveterately un-PC, says Mark Monahan.
Mark Monahan, The Telegraph, 5th April 2014Review: The Trip to Italy, BBC Two
The Trip is a hall of mirrors put together with the help of Heath Robinson. It's a comedy vehicle in which pretty much the only thing that's real is the actual vehicle.
Jasper Rees, The Arts Desk, 5th April 2014The Trip to Italy was travel porn with smiles. Knowing smirks, occasional laughy guffaws: but good smart tetchy humour throughout, as Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon reunited to busk off each other's ego - quite how close to those being their alter-egos is uncertain, though I suspect the difference has long been moot - but this time in Italy, eating roisteringly good food in the famous Trattoria della Posta in Langhe (near Barolo, yum, and splendid it looked) and alarming only slightly the lieges with sudden impressions of Ronnie Corbett, Al Pacino or, wonderfully improvised, mumbling Batman characters. Never less than clever, and promises much as the weeks roll on, not least the glorious intercut views of red-boiling kitchens and sweet, warm seas.
Apparently this paper, The Observer, sent both of them there as food/holiday critics. Not true (or is it? Ref! I haven't had a hol for three years). One thing's certain. We did send Kim Philby as a correspondent to Beirut, where he was finally cornered by his friend Elliot. We were founded in 1791; occasional mistakes have been made.
Euan Ferguson, The Guardian, 5th April 2014The Trip - or, as it's now titled, The Trip to Italy - returned on Friday on BBC Two. Essentially it's the same show: Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, playing caricatures of themselves, talk rubbish and swap impressions in restaurants. It's very funny.
Now and again it threatens to turn into a deeper, more mature sort of programme, about Coogan and Brydon's relationships with their families.
Personally I'd rather it didn't. I could easily take half an hour of solid nonsense from them. There's almost no plot, but in the interests of more nonsense I'd accept less.
Following semi-improvised gem The Trip, where Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon played versions of themselves in northern eateries, Michael Winterbottom returns to direct this follow-up, set in rooms containing Italian restaurant-goers. Expect more impersonations, including a superb riff on Tom Hardy's Batman villain Bane stealing Brydon's voiceover work.
Mark Jones, The Guardian, 4th April 2014Radio Times review
I had some sympathy with those who thought 2010's first series of The Trip was too self-referential and up itself. They'll probably think the same of this second series, where Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan play versions of themselves pootling through Italy dining in high-end restaurants. None of this alters the fact that it's helplessly, hilariously funny.
Both men are obviously a bit older and a bit more aware of the passage of time. Coogan's worried that his career might be hitting the doldrums and that he doesn't have his old pulling-power now that women see him as middle-aged.
He and Brydon have a good-naturedly barbed friendship as they chat amicably over dinner, kicking around each other's insecurities. The best bits are their competitive impressions - Brydon doing a B&Q advert voiceover as Tom Hardy's Batman villain Bane is a hoot.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 4th April 2014The Trip To Italy preview
The difference with this and other comedies on television is its pace. Whilst most comedies are quick-paced this one is the complete opposite.
Elliot Gonzalez, I Talk Telly, 4th April 2014The Trip to Italy: Britain's best ever improv comedy?
Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon's culinary travelogue comedy The Trip to Italy may well be the most sustained and successful example of genuine ad-libbing that Britain has ever produced.
Mark Lawson, The Guardian, 4th April 2014Steve Coogan on The Trip, politics and Alan Partridge
"I like using comedy in drama and that's what I'm interested in developing"
Ginny Dougary, Radio Times, 4th April 2014The Trip to Italy - TV review
It's funny business as usual, as Coogan and Brydon impersonate their way through Italy in this reinvented travelogue.
Sam Wollaston, The Guardian, 4th April 2014