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Movie Review: Mr. Bean's Holiday

Movie Info

RATING:

G

GENRE:

Comedy, Adaptation, Sequel

RELEASE:

August 24, 2007 (wide)

STARRING:

Rowan Atkinson, Willem Dafoe, Emma De Caunes, Jean Rochefort, Karel Roden

DIRECTORS:

Steve Bendelack

DISTRIBUTOR:

Universal Pictures Distribution

 

Please Note

In providing movie reviews on our site, CBN.com is not endorsing or recommending films we review. Our goal is to provide Christians with information about the latest movies, both the good and the bad, so that our readers may make an informed decision as to whether or not films are appropriate for them and their families.

MOVIE REVIEW

Mr. Bean's Holiday

Movieguide Magazine

CBN.com - Rowan Atkinson once again plays the title role in Mr. Bean's Holiday, a G-rated pastiche of many sight gags centered on the self-absorbed, careless Mr. Bean.

The movie opens with Mr. Bean winning the first prize in a church raffle, a free trip to the beaches at Cannes, France. Mr. Bean excitedly videotapes his every moment. At the railway station in Paris, he convinces a man to tape him at the door of the train. Mr. Bean makes the train but the man does not, and Mr. Bean stands helpless at the closed door, which he can’t figure out how to open. Then, Mr. Bean realizes that the man’s son is left on the train. The man yells to his panicked son to wait for him at the next stop.

At the next station, however, the next train does not stop, so the boy’s father holds up a sign with his cell phone number in the window. Luckily, Mr. Bean has taped the event but he and the boy discover that the father had his fingers over the last two numbers. They decide to go through all the possible combinations, but in the process of doing that, Mr. Bean leaves behind their passports and train tickets.

Mr. Bean and the boy start hitching their way across France to Cannes, but comic disaster stalks them at every turn. A camera at the second train station leads the father and the police to believe that Mr. Bean has kidnapped the boy. Everything comes to a head in a hilarious, joyful sequence at the Cannes Film Festival, where Mr. Bean almost ruins the premiere of a director’s new movie.

The ending and some of Mr. Atkinson’s more inspired comic bits make up for some pacing problems in the middle of Mr. Bean's Holiday. One of the funniest bits is a pantomime of a tragic opera song performed by Mr. Bean and the boy. A main drawback is that Mr. Bean steals a couple items in the story, including a bicycle and a small motorized bike, and deliberately dumps a plate of uneaten oysters into a woman’s purse. Offsetting these moral lapses in his character is his concern that the boy get back safely with his father.

At the end of the movie, misunderstandings are cleared up and Mr. Bean sings about the joys of France and the French Riviera with the other cast members.

Movieguide® gives a caution to Mr. Bean's Holiday for younger children because Mr. Bean sometimes acts like a naughty child.

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NOTE from Dr. Ted Baehr, publisher of Movieguide Magazine. For more information from a Christian perspective, order the latest Movieguide Magazine by calling 1-800-899-6684(MOVI) or visit our website at www.movieguide.org. Movieguide is dedicated to redeeming the values of Hollywood by informing parents about today's movies and entertainment and by showing media executives and artists that family-friendly and even Christian-friendly movies do best at the box office year in and year out. Movieguide now offers an online subscription to its magazine version, at www.movieguide.org. The magazine, which comes out 25 times a year, contains many informative articles and reviews that help parents train their children to be media-wise consumers.

 



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