To
celebrate the new Who season, here’s
a Peter Capaldi review – like the old days!
Going into Paddington, my
guess was “decent for a kids’ movie,” but I was impressed at how much I liked
it. It’s a fun film with great visual
design, surprisingly sly humor, and a great, likeable cast.
Based
on a children’s series, Paddington is
the story of a young (talking) bear discovered by a London family at Paddington
station (where he gets his name.) His
rare, highly-intelligent breed from Peru loves England, thanks to their encounters
with a British explorer decades earlier, but Paddington is the first to
actually go there. Yet, his English intel
is outdated; not all strangers are friendly, and he’s not instantly taken in by
a sympathetic family a la evacuated
children during WWII. Instead, he only
just manages to score a one-night stay with the mostly-unwelcoming Brown family. The clumsy but optimistic bear works hard to
understand his new surroundings and be accepted, hoping to find a permanent
home by winning over his temporary family.
Capaldi
plays the Browns’ neighbor, Mr. Curry, who’s not at all sure about the idea of
a bear moving in next door. He proves an
easy mark for the chief villain of the piece, an obsessed taxidermist, and soon
finds himself in the role of something like a comic henchman.
The
comedy in his subplot is a bit broader than a lot of the film’s humor, which
isn’t my favorite, but Mr. Curry also ties into what is, for me, the most
unexpected aspect of the film. He’s used
to explore a major theme: Paddington’s
situation as an analogy for that of newly-arrived immigrants. Curry doesn’t want “that sort” in the
neighborhood and is susceptible to slippery-slope fear-mongering about how “it
starts with just one bear and then
before you know it…” He even makes
disparaging remarks about the “jungle music” he expects Paddington probably
listens to. So, even though the role
itself isn’t all that spectacular, it’s used to make some pretty neat
connections to issues of immigration, xenophobia, and multiculturalism. Which, I have to say, is not something I was expecting from the movie where the CGI bear floods
the bathroom!
The
film features Hugh “Lord Grantham” Bonneville, Austen alum Sally Hawkins, and
Nicole Kidman, with voice cameos from Imelda Staunton and Michael Gambon. Our main bear is voiced with warmth by Ben
Whishaw a.k.a. The Hour’s Freddie and
a stunning Richard II.
Accent Watch
London,
only a little wobbly.
Recommend?
In
General
– If you’re at all into family movies, I would.
It’s sweet, funny, and pretty clever.
PC-wise – Maybe. It’s a decent-sized role with some fairly
amusing scenes.
Warnings
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