
MR. BEAN (PG)
Director: Mel Smith
Stars: Rowan Atkinson, Peter
MacNicol, Pamela Reed, Harris
Yulin, Burt Reynolds, John Mills,
Richard Gant, Tricia Vessey, Andrew
Lawrence, Tom McGowan, Sandra
Oh
Running Time: 98 minutes.
Rowan Atkinson brings his famous creation, the
hapless, disastrously accident prone Mr Bean, to the
big screen in this hilarious and thoroughly enjoyable
film. Bean seems deliberately designed to broaden his
appeal, especially to American audiences who are
largely unfamiliar with the antics of this destructive
child in a man's body. Bean is a comic character who
embodies many of the classic traits of those silent
comedians such as Laurel and Hardy, Buster
Keaton and the ilk, although his mischievous brand
of humour contains a more malicious edge.
The film begins when a wealthy American general
(Burt Reynolds) donates $50 million to a private LA
art gallery, enabling it to purchase America's greatest
painting, Whistler's Mother, from the French. Gallery
owner George Grierson (Harris Yulin) asks the
British National Art Gallery to send over an art expert
who will add some gravity to the unveiling ceremony.
In an act of pure pique, the British send Bean, their
most detested employee, ridding themselves of him
and also deliberately taking their trans-Atlantic
colleagues down a peg or two into the bargain. Bean
is billeted at the home of the gallery curator David
Langley (Peter MacNicol, from Dracula: Dead And
Loving It, etc), and is promptly responsible for
wrecking his home and destroying his marriage. Bean
also runs afoul of the law, who somewhat naively
mistake his strange, childlike behaviour and lunatic
antics as the kind of behaviour expected from brilliant
but eccentric British academics.
Letting Bean within sneezing distance of the painting
is a recipe for disaster, and he quickly fulfills
audiences' worst expectations by destroying the
painting. Bean deliberately aims for a splendid mix of
low brow and physical humour. Although many of
Bean's comical routines will undoubtedly be familiar,
which should be more than enough to satisfy fans of
the popular and consistently high rating tv series,
creators and co-writers Richard Curtis and Robin
Driscoll (Four Weddings And A Funeral, Black
Adder, etc) have devised some new but equally as
chaotic and hilarious set pieces. This film also enables
Atkinson to expand the character somewhat, giving
him more depth than normally seen in his tv
appearances, by actually forcing him to confront the
personal and human consequences of his inept
blundering. Bean actually provides the normally
unrepentant character an opportunity to repair much
of the damage caused by his unthinking blundering.
Audiences are also treated to the rare experience of
hearing the normally silent and notoriously shy Bean
speak, a device that does slightly undermine the
mystique of the character. But that is only a minor
quibble with this hilarious film, which is directed at a
brisk pace by tv comic turned director Mel Smith
(whose previous efforts behind the camera include
The Tall Guy). Smith ensures that this big screen
incarnation of Mr Bean doesn't outstay his welcome
or lose his unique appeal during the brief but
enormously satisfying 98 minutes.
Atkinson is undoubtedly the star of the film, and
Bean gives him ample opportunity to display those
talents for physical comedy and manic contortions
that have endeared the character to fans. MacNicol
essentially plays his role as the hapless Langley
straight, providing a perfect foil and balance for
Atkinson's manic antics, while Pamela Reed
(Kindergarten Cop, etc) contributes some nice
hysteria as Langley's wife who, understandably, takes
an instant dislike to Bean. The inclusion of several
serious veteran performers such as Yulin and
Reynolds in smaller roles lends some weight to the
material.
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission