The choice of this film was a unanimous decision by the Committee bolstered by requests from several of our regulars.
We had screened the original Paddington film and that had gone down well. i had enjoyed it very much but after the reviews for the new film I saw it at the cinema last year and really enjoyed seeing it again: on a second viewing you get a chance to pick up on the incidental detail that passes you by first time around.
It was a good evening - and also very well attended.
Here are my notes
We had screened the original Paddington film and that had gone down well. i had enjoyed it very much but after the reviews for the new film I saw it at the cinema last year and really enjoyed seeing it again: on a second viewing you get a chance to pick up on the incidental detail that passes you by first time around.
It was a good evening - and also very well attended.
Here are my notes
Paddington
2
UK 2017 104 minutes
Director: Paul King
Starring: Ben Whishaw, Hugh Bonneville, Sally
Hawkins and Hugh Grant
Awards and Nominations
- Nominated
for three BAFTAs – Best Supporting Actor (Hugh Grant), Best Film and Best
Adapted Screenplay
- A further three wins and five nominations
“This is the follow-up
to the first Paddington movie of 2014 and it’s a tremendously sweet-natured,
charming, unassuming and above all funny film with a story that just rattles
along, powered by a nonstop succession of Grade-A gags conjured up by
screenwriters Paul King (who also directs), Simon Farnaby and Jon Croker. Their
screenplay perfectly catches the tone of the great master himself, Michael
Bond, author of the original books, who sadly died in June this year at the age of 91, creative and productive to the end.”
Peter
Bradshaw
Paddington is now
happily settled in Windsor Gardens with the Brown family. While searching for a
present for his Aunt Lucy’s 100th birthday he finds a unique pop-up
book in Mr Gruber’s antique shop, and undertakes a series of jobs to earn money
to buy it. However when the book is stolen Paddington and the Brown family have
to unmask the thief.
The global success of Paddington (2014) made it inevitable
that a sequel would follow and the film reunites the same director and
principal cast members, with the addition of newcomer Hugh Grant in a
scene-stealing role as Phoenix Buchanan, an ageing actor now reduced to appearing
in commercials for dog food. The main characters have come from the books that Michael
Bond wrote, and thus the film qualifies for nominations as a “best adapted
screenplay” but, just as in the first
film, the screenwriters have produced an original screenplay that nonetheless manages
to retain the spirit of the published stories: Michael Bond was partly inspired
to create Paddington by his memory of seeing child evacuees with labels around
their necks and carrying suitcases as they left London at the beginning of the
Second World War, both Paddington and his best friend Mr Gruber (Jim Broadbent)
are immigrants and the area of London where the Browns live is, with the
exception of Mr Curry (Peter Capaldi), most definitely multi-cultural. It is
impossible in the current environment to escape entirely from the long shadow
of politics, even in what is ostensibly a children’s film, and thus Sight & Sound was able to lead its rave
review of the film with the memorable headline “Brexit, pursued by a bear”.
From an audience
approval perspective the film has an approval rating of 100% on the aggregator site
Rotten Tomatoes and thus joins an elite and eclectic list which includes established
classics such as Bride of Frankenstein
(1931), Mary Poppins (1964) and Day for Night (1973). The film also
appeared in 18th place in The
Guardian’s list of the best films of 2017.
As a result of the global success of the film the CEO of StudioCanal has
confirmed that the studio is committed to making a third Paddington film, although no details have yet been released.
The film is dedicated
to the memory of Michael Bond, who died at the age of 91 while the film was in
production.
Here's the trailer:
Here's the trailer: