Mr. Bean's Holiday is a 2007 British family comedy film, inspired by Steve 
Bendelack, music composed from Howard Goodall, produced by Peter Bennett-Jones, 
Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner, produced by Hamish McColl and Robin Driscoll and / 
or starring Rowan Atkinson, Max Baldry, Emma de Caunes and Willem Dafoe. It's 
the second film based on the television programs series Mr. Bean, following the 
the late nineties Bean. The film was theatrically sold on March 24, 2007 by 
Wide-spread Pictures. The film received mixed remarks from critics but earned 
$229.7 billion dollars on a $25 million budget. Mr. Bean's Holiday was released 
on DVD and HD DVD relating to 27 November 2007.
The film opens with Mr. Bean 
driving up to a church, where a fete is taking place. Bean is the winner of the 
first prize in the new raffle - a holiday using a train journey to Cannes, a 
video camera, and 190.
Following a misunderstanding involving a taxi cab at 
the Gare du Nord) railway station in Paris, Coffee bean is forced to make a way 
unorthodoxly towards the Gare de Lyon to board or even next train towards 
Cannes. However, a vending machine prevents the pup from boarding, and he misses 
his train, giving him a couple of hours to sample French seafood 
cooking.
Back on the platform, Coffee bean asks a man, who has started to 
become Russian movie director Emil Duchevsky (Karel Roden), to use a camcorder 
to film him strutting onto the train. Bean is really a big fuss and keeps 
expecting retakes, so by the instance they are done, the study is about to 
leave. Although Bean manages to get onto the train, the doors close before 
Duchevsky can get on. Duchevsky's son, Stepan (Max Baldry) thus remains left on 
board by little.
Bean attempts to befriend that this boy, who has been warned 
to get off at another station, and eventually comes in which to his rescue at 
the station, unfortunately missing his train again. The train Stepan's father 
has boarded does not stop at the station, and one mobile number is held up, with 
the last three digits obscured. Attempts at calling the amount prove fruitless. 
The next work on comes and they board. However, Bean has left his wallet, 
passport and ticket on the cell phone box. Bean and Stepan may very well be 
thrown off the train.
Attempts at begging and miming to Puccini's O mio 
babbino caro prove successful, and Beans buys the pair a harmful ticket to 
Cannes. Bean in a position lose his, though, and attempts to hitchhike his way 
there. Mr Bean soon falls asleep, worn out from walking and wakes through to 
what appears to be a functional quaint French village but typically is a film 
set for a yoghurt advert. Bean ends up as an extra in the advert, directed by 
Carson Clay (Willem Dafoe), but inadvertently ends via a flight destroying the 
set in a blast at the when he charged his the camera.

