What happens in the movie theater is that the young boy's father was at the event as well watching the movie. By the time they go to the Film Festival, they have to sneak inside while the girl is able to make it to the movie that she was in. Bean to bring her to the Cannes Film Festival, he brings her along. Bean decides to take good care of the young boy as he tries to find the dad.Īlong his way, he even ends up finding a young girl who loves to act and is a part of one of the movies in the film, but after she asks Mr. He ends up struggling as he sees the father isn't able to make it on the train but his son is already on the train. When he goes to his trip, he stumbles upon a father and son who board the same train as him on their way to Cannes as well. Aside from the trip, he also won a nice looking HD camera to create all of his memories. However, his life changes when he gets the chance to travel to the Cannes Film Festival after accidentally winning a raffle draw. He also finally gets the chance to see what he always wanted to see the beach in Cannes. Bean still acts like his normal self at the end of the movie, but he finds that he is a better person because of the experience. Bean made and that he is a good guy and took care of the boy, everybody applauds and the director of the movie ends up making it seem like the video was his movie. However, after the movie screen accidentally showcases the home videos that Mr. Bean is then explained as a weird person because he was with the young boy all along. Along his way, he even ends up finding a young girl who loves to act and is a part of one of the movies in the film, but after she asks Mr. Bean decides to take good care of the young boy as he tries to find the dad. As a bonus, the cinematography is beautiful, capturing the glistening waves and beautiful beaches of the Riviera with a travelogue's eye.Mr. The kid in all of us, perhaps still smarting from being called clumsy and clueless, should delight in Bean's weird brand of perfect revenge. Nay-sayng critics will say that Atkinson's rubbery, contorted face and spastic physicality are perhaps best left on the small screen, but millions of Bean fans can't be wrong there's plenty to enjoy, from the hilarious scene of Bean earning money by lip-synching the songs of a fellow busker, to his meddling in the projection booth at Cannes. An aspiring young actress (Emma de Caunes) helps out and Willem Dafoe is the uptight director. Many of the extended bits are funny: there's Bean's frantic attempts to catch the train, his fouling up World War Two movie set, knocking shellfish into a lady's purse, messing up the Cannes premiere of an uptight director, and bonding with a Russian boy who gets separated from his father (thanks to Bean's misdoings). Mostly a series of episodes involving Bean's inability to communicate with French and Russian speakers, this will please youngsters who may be unable to hold continual plot lines together and for whom adult language is still a bafflement. This time he wins a trip to the Cannes Film Festival and havoc ensues to such an extent that he may never even get there. Bean (Rowan Atkinson) is back in this jovial comedy.
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