The World's Best Franchise, 'Paddington,' Will Get A New Installment
Even before Paddington 2 accidentally became the best-reviewed film of all time after an ancient negative review of Citizen Kane was unearthed in 2021, the film franchise was a covert Hollywood insider reference. Ostensibly aimed at little kids, these adorable live-action, animation-blended movies are quietly brilliant. The franchise's A-list cast, from Ben Whishaw (who voices the titular bear) to the murderer's row line-up of Hugh Bonneville, Joanna Lumley, Brendan Gleeson, and Sally Hawkins, to name a few, was an embarrassment of talent. Even Hugh Grant, who plays the antagonist in the sequel, cheerfully declared it his best work.
By the time Nicholas Cage and Queen Elizabeth II took note of the bear's overwhelming popularity and cemented the current iteration of him as the One True Paddington, against which all others will be measured, a third film was already greenlit. And on a weekend where quite a few of us could use some cheering, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed that the sequel will be helmed by a new director, Dougal Wilson, who replaces Paul King. (King was already booked to direct the deeply odd-looking Wonka prequel, more's the pity for him, but never mind.)
The new installment will be christened Paddington In Peru, a reference to the bear's homeland. (Book readers will recall that Paddington traveled to London from "darkest Peru," which always made me ask why no one could find the light switch.) Why Paddington returns to his homeland from his London adventures remains to be seen, but one can always hope it's because he would like to visit his mother for tea. King will not exit the project entirely and he may not be available to direct he is behind the new installment's story, co-authoring it with Paddington's other regular collaborators, Simon Farnaby and Mark Burton. (Burton penned the actual screenplay with Jon Foster and James Lamont.) King will also serve as an executive producer.