El Dorado News-Times

Third installmen­t of Steve Cooganʼs ʻTripʼ movies a pleasure

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SEATTLE (AP) — At one point in "The Trip to Spain," Rob Brydon, at a restaurant table in Spain, imitates Mick Jagger imitating Rob Brydon imitating Michael Caine. (I'll pause for you to catch up with that sentence. All good now?) And then Steve Coogan jumps in, imitating Brydon imitating Jagger imitating Brydon imitating Caine, throwing in a head-jerking, peacocky move and a puffed-out penguin chest and a weird little airborne clap, and all you can think is, a) yes, that is exactly what Mick Jagger sounds like, and b) I wish I were at that table.

That's the pleasure of the uneven but enjoyable "Trip" movies, of which this is the third installmen­t: For better or worse, it's almost like being at that table. Directed by Michael Winterbott­om ("In This World," "Tristram Shandy," "A Mighty Heart"), this trio is perhaps filmdom's oddest franchise: It's based on a BBC series in which British actors Brydon and Coogan — playing characters who happen to be British actors named Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan — travel through England ("The Trip," 2010), Italy ("The Trip to Italy," 2014) and now Spain; they dine in lovely restaurant­s, stay in beautiful hotels and, mostly, sit around doing impression­s between bites.

If this sounds like a rather weak hook to hang an entire movie on, well, I won't argue: The "Trip" movies, like the anchovies Coogan and Brydon happily devour, aren't to everyone's taste. This installmen­t, despite a fair bit of bitterswee­t musing about middle age (noting that they are now ripe fruit, one wonders "Is it better to be plucked, or to drop?") and some amusing allusions to "Don Quixote," is as plotless as ever, and the cooking/ food shots still seem like outtakes from a promotiona­l travel video. (This leaves much time for pondering the fact that the older Brydon gets, the more he looks and sounds like Hugh Grant. Could Grant please join them for the next outing?)

But oh, those impression­s, which this time include Brando, John Hurt, Ian McKellen, Bogart, Woody Allen, Anthony Hopkins and a truly fabulous "Stones doing Shakespear­e" bit, in case you've ever wondered what Mick Jagger's Hamlet might sound like. I hadn't; turns out, I was missing something.

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