

#Mr bean girlfriend tv#
After attempting to steal a motorcycle and almost getting killed by a lorry, Bean stumbles on to the set for a TV advertisement, which he accidentally blows up, injuring the director Carson Clay (Willem Dafoe).īean then tries to hitch-hike again a yellow Mini picks him up, much like the one he owns back in London, driven by actress Sabine (Emma de Caunes) who Bean encountered both at the commercial filming and previously, who offers him a lift to Cannes. On his return, he finds that the bicycle has been run over by a tank, but the camera is still intact. Bean then steals a nearby bicycle and follows the chicken which has been placed onto a Peugeot 504 pickup and ends up at a chicken pen. Bean loses his ticket by getting the ticket stuck on a chicken's foot. They board the next train, but since Bean has left his ticket and passport on the station public telephone, the duo are soon thrown out of the train.Īttempts at busking by miming to Puccini's O mio babbino caro (sung by Rita Streich) and other music prove successful, and Bean buys them a bus ticket to Cannes. Their efforts at calling the number prove fruitless even though at one point they do get through to the Dachevskys' hotel room, but the phone is answered by the maid, whose voice Stepan does not recognize. The train that Stepan's father has boarded does not stop at the station, and he holds up a mobile number, but with the last two digits obscured. Dachevsky's son, Stepan (Max Baldry) is therefore left on board by himself.īean attempts to befriend Stepan, with the result that when the boy slaps him in the face and when he gets off at the next station, Bean gets off too and accidentally misses the train, along with his bag aboard. Although Bean manages to get onto the train, the doors close before Dachevsky can get on. By the time they are done, the TGV is about to leave.
#Mr bean girlfriend movie#
He surreptitiously pours the oysters into a nearby lady's handbag, and eats the whole langoustine without taking off the shell in front of everybody.īack on the platform, Bean asks a man, who happens to be a Cannes Film Festival jury member and Russian movie critic Emil Dachevsky (Karel Roden), to use his camcorder to film his walking onto the train. His disgust for oysters may be explained from the Mr.

Unable to communicate in French, he accidentally orders oysters and langoustines, which he cannot bring himself to eat. As he misses the train whilst getting his tie stuck in a vending machine and the next one won't leave for another hour, he has time to sample French seafood at Le Train Bleu restaurant. The prize is a holiday involving a train journey to Cannes, a Sony video camera and €200.įollowing a misunderstanding involving a taxi at the Gare du Nord railway station in Paris, Bean is forced to make his way unorthodoxly towards the Gare de Lyon to board his next train towards Cannes. Seeing the ticket upside down reading 919, he grabs the ticket and yells out that he won in his mumbling deep voice. Angry that he "lost", Bean throws the ticket onto a toy train. Bean (Rowan Atkinson) attending a raffle in June. Universal Pictures released a teaser trailer in November 2006, and in December 2006 launched an official website online. The movie's official premiere took place at Leicester Square's Odeon in London on Sunday, 25 March, and helped to raise money for both Comic Relief and the Oxford Children's Hospital Appeal charity. Bean sketch was broadcast on the Comic Relief telethon on BBC One on 16 March 2007. Prior to the film's release, a new and exclusive Mr. It was the official film for Red Nose Day 2007, with money from the film going towards the charity Comic Relief. Unlike the 1997 Mel Smith film, Mr Bean's Holiday was directed by Steve Bendelack. He was also quoted as saying "Never say never" but went on to add that it was highly unlikely he would appear as Mr. Bean's Holiday will most likely be the last ] story he appears in. The screenplay was finally confirmed to have been written by Robin Driscoll, Simon McBurney and Hamish McColl. News of the second film first broke in early 2005, suggesting that it would be written by Simon McBurney, although in December 2005, Atkinson stated that the screenplay was being written by himself and long-time collaborator Richard Curtis.
