Les Vacances de Mr. Bean

  • Grande-Bretagne Mr. Bean's Holiday (plus)
Bande-annonce 2

Résumés(1)

Mr. Bean a gagné une semaine de vacances sur la Côte d'Azur, et une caméra vidéo. Il quitte son Angleterre natale pour la France. Arrivé à Paris, il demande à un autre passager de le filmer en train de monter à bord du train pour Cannes. L'homme est en fait le réalisateur russe Emil Duchevsky, qui se rend à Cannes pour faire partie du jury du Festival du Film. Dans la confusion du départ, Duchevsky rate le train, et Mr. Bean se retrouve à bord avec Stepan, son fils de dix ans, qui ne parle pas un mot d'anglais. Pour Mr. Bean et Stepan commence alors un périple vers le sud de la France plein de surprises, de rencontres et d'aventures toutes plus délirantes les unes que les autres... (texte officiel du distributeur)

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Vidéo (2)

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Critiques (4)

novoten 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I'm really sorry that such a brilliant character has to end their journey in a failed mess, the only plus side being that Mr. Bean doesn't do a lot of talking, otherwise things would have turned out even worse. There is a difference between when Richard Curtis and Rowan Atkinson take care with each shot and intertwine the script with clever and well-planned sketches, and when they paste proven, but more suffering grimaces onto silly family troubles. Rowan's rubber face still has a lot to offer even after so many years, and when we get a new gag, it's worth it, and while watching the episodes by the speaker or escaping on a motorcycle, I went back many years ago when I saw this perfect clown for the first time. I'll keep playing those episodes, but I can no longer watch a script turn this perfectly cunning character into someone who almost acts like he's sick. ()

Stanislaus 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Mr. Bean works best in short sketches - I wrote that about Bean: The Ultimate Disaster Movie as well - but while I found the American adventure quite entertaining, Mr. Bean's Holiday in Europe hardly appealed to me at all. At some points, Bean's bad luck and ineptitude even annoyed me, and I felt like they relied on a proven brand (Mr. Bean) and forgot to take care of the comedy. The screening of Willem Dafoe's self-absorbed film with Bean's interludes was hilarious, but by the final set-piece on the beach, the smile had passed and all that came out of my mouth was an incomprehensible "wtf?!". ()

Annonces

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Mr Bean should stick to TV, movies don’t suit him. A TV show can work with a series of funny scenes, but a film needs a story, and therein lies the problem. Half of the humour relies solely on Atkinson making faces, and from the other half only very little is truly funny. Disappointment, 40% ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais So it's still Mr. Bean, surprisingly too much - he doesn't try to talk much, he's just that grotesque character again who gets himself into funny situations. This time, he ends up being accused of kidnapping a boy, whose father, by the way, is Karel Roden. It's not a big movie, but you will enjoy this trip through France for one viewing. It's a shame that the setting isn't utilized even more. ()

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