British Comedy Guide
The Trip. Image shows from L to R: Steve (Steve Coogan), Rob (Rob Brydon). Copyright: Baby Cow Productions / Arbie
The Trip

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

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Press clippings Page 20

The Trip, BBC Two, Mondays

Largely improvised, the programme blooms to become a very touching exploration of friendship and aging.

Damien Love, The Herald, 1st November 2010

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon have struck gold with this new series. Not only is it a breath of fresh air in the schedules, it also looks like the most fun two pals can ever have making a television programme.

The two protagonists are filmed chewing the fat and gulping down first-class food on a culinary tour of the north of England. How hard can life be?

What's that? A script? Oh, there's no script, this is improvised so there's no need to worry about your lines. Just sit back, scoff the delicious scran, knock back a glass or two of Pinot Grigio and let the banter flow.

It's a conversation which has probably been heard countless times before in every pub in the country. Two mates, chatting and making each other laugh, when one says: "You know what, we should be on the telly, this is great stuff, funnier than half the rubbish on the box." Only this time, Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon had the clout to actually make it into a show.

The premise is Rob and Steve, playing themselves, review restaurants for a Sunday paper. It was planned as a romantic trip for Steve and his girlfriend but after she dumped him he's forced to call upon his pal Rob to join him.

Instead of candlelight dinners and seductive musings, we have two mates discussing the questions of life over a chocolate pudding.

Fans of Michael Winterbottom's A Cock and Bull Story will be familiar with the format (it also featured the pair playing themselves). For those unfamiliar with the film, just think of a cross between Curb Your Enthusiasm and the Great British Menu with a light dusting of The Office.

Barry McDonald, The Herald, 1st November 2010

Steve Coogan: Two parts Partridge, one part genius

He is about to reprise his most famous role while also appearing as the Observer's restaurant critic on TV. But will we ever see the real man?

Stephanie Merritt, The Observer, 31st October 2010

Video: Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon take a trip

Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan have become comedy partners in a new BBC Two show called The Trip.

Steve Coogan plays a food critic who is ditched by his girlfriend and forced to take his friend Rob on a restaurant road journey.

BBC News, 29th October 2010

Maverick film director Michael Winterbottom hops genres with exhilarating ease. Now he offers a uniquely British spin on the road movie. The Trip premiered earlier this year as a feature film, but the BBC has opted to air it as a six-part comedy-drama. The unhurried, graceful style of this first episode suggests it was a wise decision. Playing semi-fictionalised versions of themselves, comedians Steve Coogan (still best-known for I'm Alan Partridge) and Rob Brydon (Gavin & Stacey, Marion and Geoff, QI) spar to perfection as reluctant travel companions. Coogan is asked by a national newspaper to tour the North and review restaurants. When his girlfriend backs out of accompanying him, Coogan begrudgingly asks Brydon to come along instead. The largely improvised dialogue allows the pair to play off their public personae to great effect. Coogan is neurotic and gnarly. The affable Brydon has an endearingly sentimental streak, eager to please his sardonic friend. Their gently antagonistic relationship is beautifully realised over the course of lunch at The Inn at Whitewell in Lancashire. A typically scattershot exchange, in which the duo try to top each other's impersonations of Michael Caine and Anthony Hopkins, provides the episode's comic highlight. Winterbottom intersperses their dialogue with lingering shots of the Inn's elegant dining room and exquisite food, and, outside, a glorious expansive backdrop of rolling hills.

Toby Dantzic, The Telegraph, 29th October 2010

Brydon & Coogan: We're not the big buddies people think

The comedians play companions in their new TV series, The Trip. But their real-life relationship runs far from smoothly.

Laura Barton, The Guardian, 26th October 2010

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon are reunited... to do lunch

Comedians are cast as Observer restaurant writers in Michael Winterbottom's TV sitcom probing the world of foodies.

Vanessa Thorpe, The Observer, 25th July 2010

Steve Coogan returns with new comic creation - himself

Funnyman Steve Coogan is to return to TV with a new comic creation - himself.

Press Association, The Independent, 14th July 2010

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