Mr. Bean's Holiday Review
by Jerry Saravia (Faust668 AT msn DOT com)July 31st, 2008
MR. BEAN'S HOLIDAY (2007)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
RATING: Three stars
Mr. Bean is certainly an acquired taste, and so is Rowan Atkinson who plays him. I can't imagine American audiences warming up to a man- child like Mr. Bean, who mugs for the camera mercilessly (of course, only in France is Jerry Lewis admired as a genius). 1997's "Mr. Bean" did not find its core audience in America and this mindless yet quite engaging comedy sequel, "Mr. Bean's Holiday," found even less of an audience. It is a shame because Atkinson has crafted a character whose simple-mindedness can serve as a reminder of Charlie Chaplin.
The movie can easily be described as simply as Mr. Bean goes on a holiday to Cannes, thanks to a winning ticket. Disaster strikes from the beginning after arriving in Paris, he marches across streets and everything in between according to the lines of a map, including walking over any obstacle in his path (this is similar to a Levi's commercial from a year ago). At a French restaurant, he orders lobster and has no idea of how to eat it (some of the gags will remind one of Daryl Hannah's mermaid eating a lobster dinner in "Splash"). Before boarding a train, he asks a passenger to take pictures of him with his Sony mini-DV camera as he is approaching the train (there is one take after another). Naturally, the passenger's son ends up leaving the train without him thanks to Mr. Bean.
The rest of the movie follows Mr. Bean and his adventures with the passenger's son, Stepan (Max Baldry). Stepan is headed to Cannes as well since his father, the passenger who missed the train, is a member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival. In the midst of one mishap after another, Bean loses his passport, his money and his train ticket. He tries to steal a motorbike, and fails. He wanders into a movie set where an arrogant, egocentric director (Willem Dafoe, who plays the part with perfect comic pitch) is making some sort of pretentious thriller (accent on the pretentious). There Mr. Bean dresses up as a Nazi extra, and meets the lovely Sabine (Emma de Caunes), an actress who is also on her way to Cannes to see the world premiere of Dafoe's film.
"Mr. Bean's Holiday" does drag slightly in the mid section, but it picks up at the Cannes Film Festival climax which features some of the movie's best comic setpieces. Mr. Bean may be too much to bear for some, but I enjoyed his incessant mugging and his inability to be anything but clumsy and a poster child for Murphy's Law. The movie is fun in all the pratfalls and comical blunders the character commits, though nothing is as funny as when he performs Puccini's famous "O mio babbino caro" on the streets for money, using nothing more than a caftan and a boom box!
As I said before, either you're with "Mr. Bean's Holiday" or you are not. I was and I saw a joy in Rowan Atkinson's performance that can be described as inspired and flat-out funny - he is like a silent comedian, especially when he never says anything and mostly grunts. And any movie that features the "Hawaii-5-0" theme and Puccini has got to be a little bit special.
For more reviews, check out JERRY AT THE MOVIES at:
http://www.geocities.com/faustus_08520/Jerry_at_the_Movies.html
BIO on the author of this page at:
http://www.geocities.com/faustus_08520/index.html
Email me at [email protected] or at [email protected]
More on 'Mr. Bean's Holiday'...
Originally posted in the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup. Copyright belongs to original author unless otherwise stated. We take no responsibilities nor do we endorse the contents of this review.