Genre:
Comedy
Director: Steve Bendelack
Starring: Rowan Atkinson
RunTime: 1 hr 30 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.beansholiday.com/flash.html
Release
Date: 22 March 2007
Synopsis
:
In
BEAN II, Mr. Bean is heading to the south of France for a
holiday in the sun. His voyage from London to the Riviera
soon descends into chaos as he inadvertently creates havoc
wherever he goes, culminating in a riotous screening of his
own video diary at the Cannes Film Festival.
Movie
Review:
Admit
it: you must have at least laughed at Mr. Bean’s silly
antics once. All his ridiculously inane and juvenile jokes,
all his slapstick misadventures, all his exaggerated facial
expressions – you must be a scrooge if you hadn’t
even broken into a slight chuckle.
So it
is only natural that you won’t think much of Mr. Bean’s
creator Rowan Atkinson.
To our
surprise, the 52-year-old English actor has a master’s
degree from Oxford Queen’s College. How in the world
could someone with an academic history like this play someone
like Mr. Bean for over 15 years?
In his
latest (and some say last) outing, Mr. Bean goes to France
and well, that is about it for the plot.
Like the
television series, this 90-minute movie focuses on the embarrassing
and comedic situations the cloaked one perpetually gets into.
Restaurant jokes, mistaken identities and miscommunication
gags are what you can expect from this second Bean feature
film.
Unlike
the first movie Bean (1997) directed by Mel Smith, this one
ditches any attempt to build up a story. From the moment Mr.
Bean leaves on the train to Cannes (he wants to go to the
beaches, not the film festival), it is clear that audiences
are in for, let’s face it, three episodes of the television
show.
Not that
there is anything wrong with this, because the good-natured
movie did make us laugh out loud quite a bit. There are even
some creative (!) moments where high-brow art-house movies
screened at the Cannes festival are spoofed. Kudos to English
director Steve Bendeleck, who tackled this part of the movie
with a genuinely humorous approach.
There
are also some product placements (done quite tastefully, thank
god) and creative use of a consumer home video camera which
proves to be nice touches of creativity to an otherwise formulated
flick.
Versatile
actor Willem Dafoe (Spider-Man, Inside Man) and fresh-faced
French actress Emma de Caunes add flavour to this one-man-show
movie starring Atkinson as the resident goof.
Mr.
Bean’s retarded facial expressions, signature grunts
and incomprehensible words are what fans (you know who you
are) of the television series will enjoy. To the others, these
may just be irritatingly frustrating to watch and stomach.
But come
on, you pay for a cinema ticket to this movie, and you are
expecting serious drama?
If the
large crowd who watched this movie with us could laugh so
heartily throughout its entire runtime, we gather that they
enjoyed the countless antics provided by this popular character
that has lasted for more than a decade.
So
who are we to criticize this pleasantly agreeable flick?
Movie Rating:
(Expect the usual absurd antics from Mr. Bean in this movie,
which can actually be an enjoyable ride if you are in the
right mood)
Review by John Li
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