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Paddington

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United Kingdom, France, United States · 2014
Rated PG · 1h 36m
Director Paul King
Starring Ben Whishaw, Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins, Samuel Joslin
Genre Adventure, Comedy, Family

After a disastrous earthquake, Paddington, a young Marmalade-loving bear from Peru, travels to London to find and live with the explorer who taught his aunt and uncle English. Once there, he stays with and grows close to a human family, but an evil taxidermist and a mean neighbor pose a threat to his quest.

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What are people saying?

Ting Shing Koh Profile picture for Ting Shing Koh

Watched this with my baby cousin and instantly fell back in love with my childhood companion! Perfect for a family movie night—it brings you back to a time where things were much simpler than they are now.

Summer Goldstein Profile picture for Summer Goldstein

Sweet, engaging, and genuinely laugh-out-loud funny. A wonderful movie for curling up under a blanket with family.

What are critics saying?

80

Total Film by

Where family films so often falter, choking on their own contrived sentimentality and/or cool, Paddington is sweet and silly and, at times, edge-of-the-seat stuff.

70

The New Yorker by Anthony Lane

The writer and director, Paul King, scatters the tale with handfuls of eccentric charm, first in the forest and then in the home of the Browns. At one point, borrowing freely from Wes Anderson, he frames it as a living doll’s house, with each member of the family hard at work or play in a different room.

100

Empire by Chris Hewitt (1)

Marmaladen with gloriously silly jokes, pitch-perfect performances and incidental detail, this is a warm, witty and wondrously inventive great big bear-hug of a movie.

70

Variety by Guy Lodge

Affectionately honoring the everyday quirks of Bond’s stories, while subtly updating their middle-class London milieu, King’s film may divide loyal Paddingtophiles with its high-stakes caper plot, but their enraptured kids won’t care a whit.

80

CineVue by Joe Walsh

Devoid of cash-in cynicism, and full of belly-shaking humour, Paddington proves to be not just a wonderful contemporary rendition of the bear, but a polite hat-tip to the man who created him, paying homage in the best way possible: by bringing a gentle, slightly reserved, smile to audience faces.

60

The Guardian by Xan Brooks

Full credit to the film-makers, who manage to map their digital bear against his human co-stars and marry Bond’s antique conceit to a high-concept story.

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