Total Film

Paddington

The good news bear...

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Long-time Padington Bear fans – whether of Michael Bond’s original books or the various TV series it inspired – may find it a little hair-raising to see their ursine hero get a CG make-over for his big-screen debut. Fear not – those rodent-y posters don’t do the new bear in town justice; Paddington’s fur is as intricatel­y rendered as Sulley’s in Monsters, Inc. and his hapless character is more akin to Aardman’s all-stars than saccharine Disney critters.

Voiced gently by Ben Whishaw, he now has a tragic backstory, arriving in London after an earthquake wrecks his jungle habitat, but harbours no revenge fantasies – those are saved for Nicole Kidman’s Hitchcock crazed taxidermis­t, who wants to add Padds to her collection. So it’s significan­tly more dramatic than of yore but the tone and humour are so consistent and engaging it never unsettles.

The strongest moments are when slapstick recalls the antics of Wallace & Gromit, but the script’s packed with quips, ably delivered not just by the inspired parental pairing of Hugh Bonneville and Sally Hawkins (their kids are thinly written, as stroppy or awestruck; Julie Walters’ housekeepe­r is part Mrs Doubtfire, part Mrs Overall) but also by a supporting cast culled from Peep Show, Spy and Sightseers by ex- Mighty Boosh director Paul King.

Visually, this is a rich world of Heath Robinson-style contraptio­ns (bear-built and human) and best-of-British architectu­re, from the Browns’ Mansion Tax-tastic Georgian terrace to the splendidly lensed Natural History Museum, with nods to iconic cinema and clichés alike. Paddington has an Odessa Steps stumble and Kidman suffers a Tippi Hedren moment, while a taxi ride through central London via all the sights is deftly offset with a knowing gag.

Where family films so often choke on their own contrived sentimenta­lity and/or cool, Paddington is sweet and silly and, at

Emma Morgan times, edge-of-the-seat stuff.

THE VERDICT Colin Firth may come to rue his departure from what’s surely to become a franchise. This caper is kid-captivatin­g and perfectly parent-friendly too.

› Certificat­e PG Director Paul King Starring Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins, Ben Whishaw, Nicole Kidman, Julie Walters Screenplay Paul King Distributo­r Studiocana­l Running time 95 mins

 ??  ?? The hairy bear in the natty hat.
The hairy bear in the natty hat.

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