Paddington 2 Is Getting Crazy Good Reviews

It's 'completely delightful,' says one critic
By Arden Dier,  Newser Staff
Posted Jan 12, 2018 10:15 AM CST
Updated Jan 12, 2018 10:35 AM CST

Since 2014's Paddington, the cuddly bear has settled into his new home with the Brown family in London, but his adventures are by no means over. In Paddington 2, he gets a job so he can buy a rare book for his aunt but is wrongly imprisoned for its theft before the transaction can take place. According to critics—who give it a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes—this is not a film to miss.

  • "The movie is full of bright wit and sincere joy, as Paddington's innate kindness permeates all around him, providing a weary world just what it needs right now," writes Sean P. Means at the Salt Lake Tribune. But much more than "a warm bear hug," the film delivers fun "by the bucketful" and leaves no stone unturned "if there's a clever joke to be found under it." In other words, it's "completely delightful."
  • "What a pleasant surprise," Bruce DeMara writes at the Toronto Star. Blending "seamlessly" with its predecessor, Paddington 2 is "family-friendly fun for all ages, thanks to a marvelous script, a sterling cast and the adept, sure-handed direction of Paul King," DeMara writes. He was especially impressed with "a sublime pop-up animation scene that demonstrates King's copious attention to detail," but says the whole film is "visually lovely."

  • "We'll be hard-pressed to find a more delightful film in all of 2018," Adam Graham puts it at the Detroit News. "The whole enterprise is so whimsical and, well, British, that it feels like being whisked away to a different place," he writes. "If you have kids, take them. If you have nieces and nephews, take them. If you don’t have kids but just want to feel like one yourself, go see it," he adds. "Two paws up."
  • Justin Chang, too, notes this is not just a film for kids. It keeps the "gently whimsical, thoroughly British spirit of Michael Bond's original books" and "wraps you in its own warm embrace from start to finish," but is also "full of inspired blink-and-you-miss-it wordplay," he writes at the Los Angeles Times, also applauding Hugh Grant's "terrifically self-skewering" performance and the "marvelously intricate" production design.
(More movie review stories.)

Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X