Mr. Bean's Holiday G
Disaster has a passport.
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Also released as:
Mr. Bean's Holiday (Blu-ray)
for $23.70
DVD Details
- Rated: G
- Run Time: 1 hours, 30 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: November 27, 2007
- Originally Released: 2007
- Label: Universal Studios
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Rowan Atkinson, Emma de Caunes & Jean Rochefort | |
Directed by | Steve Bendelack | |
Screenwriting by | Hamish McColl & Robin Driscoll | |
Composition by | Howard Goodall | |
Produced by | Peter Bennett-Jones, Tim Bevan & Eric Fellner | |
Director of Photography: | Baz Irvine | |
Executive Production by | Richard Curtis & Simon McBurney |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 4/5 --
The flick itself is quite funny... if you like Mr. Bean, that is.
Full Review
7M Pictures
Mr. Bean's Holiday delivers some of the charm of the original series, and whatever it may lack, it is worth watching simply for Rowan Atkinson's dedicated performance.
Full Review
DVD Review
Rating: C+ --
Mr. Bean's Holiday is a very cute movie. Unfortunately, cute is rarely funny.
Full Review
AV Club
I hate Mr. Bean, I hated this movie. He's an annoying, creepy, leering, sweaty, unfunny character, and ten seconds would be too much and this movie's like 90 minutes.
Ebert & Roeper
[Mr. Atkinson's] googly eyes, gangly physique and elastic countenance are just fine for delivering the goods.
New York Times
Rating: 2.5/4 --
The film will appeal to Mr. Bean fans and to families looking for an amusing afternoon at the movies.
Full Review
The Oklahoman
Atkinson's Mr. Bean, a man of few words, carries their memory in his rubbery bones. When it comes to knowing where he came from, he's got the beat.
Salon.com
Product Description:
The hopelessly daft but delightful Mr. Bean (Rowan Atkinson) is back in this jovial comedy. This time he wins a trip to the Cannes Film Festival and havoc ensues to such an extent that he may never even get there. Mostly a series of episodes involving Bean's inability to communicate with French and Russian speakers, this will please youngsters who may be unable to hold continual plot lines together and for whom adult language is still a bafflement. Many of the extended bits are funny: there's Bean's frantic attempts to catch the train, his fouling up World War Two movie set, knocking shellfish into a lady's purse, messing up the Cannes premiere of an uptight director, and bonding with a Russian boy who gets separated from his father (thanks to Bean's misdoings). An aspiring young actress (Emma de Caunes) helps out and Willem Dafoe is the uptight director. Nay-sayng critics will say that Atkinson's rubbery, contorted face and spastic physicality are perhaps best left on the small screen, but millions of Bean fans can't be wrong; there's plenty to enjoy, from the hilarious scene of Bean earning money by lip-synching the songs of a fellow busker, to his meddling in the projection booth at Cannes. The kid in all of us, perhaps still smarting from being called clumsy and clueless, should delight in Bean's weird brand of perfect revenge. As a bonus, the cinematography is beautiful, capturing the glistening waves and beautiful beaches of the Riviera with a travelogue's eye.