Paddington: The Junior Novel.
Adapted by Jeanne Willis from the screenplay by Paul King. HarperFestival.
$5.99.
Paddington: Meet Paddington.
Adapted by Annie Auerbach from the screenplay by Paul King. Harper. $3.99.
Paddington: Paddington’s
Adventures. Adapted by Annie Auerbach from the screenplay by Paul King.
Harper. $3.99.
Paddington: Paddington in London.
Adapted by Annie Auerbach and Mandy Archer from the screenplay by Paul King.
HarperFestival. $3.99.
Paddington: Paddington’s World.
Adapted by Annie Auerbach and Mandy Archer from the screenplay by Paul King.
HarperFestival. $3.99.
Michael Bond’s marvelous
tales of Paddington, the bear from “darkest Peru” who shows up at London’s
Paddington Station one day, lost and craving marmalade, originated more than
half a century ago: A Bear Called
Paddington was published in 1958. Clearly these sweet, innocent,
mischievous and subtly destabilizing stories – the most recent of which, Love from Paddington, is brand new, as
Bond continues chronicling the bear’s fortunes and misfortunes – are too
laid-back and wry for the film industry. And so we have a Paddington movie that combines live action with the now-typical
computer-generated bear who moves almost realistically and communicates almost
believably while going through a series of trials and tribulations that are
almost those created by Bond. But not quite. Movies for young people need
clear-cut heroes and villains, the thinking goes, but alas, there are no such
in the Paddington books, where just about everyone and just about everything is
good-natured and where misunderstandings rather than outright evil drive the
stories and provide the amusement. But what works for a bear called Paddington
will simply not do for a movie called Paddington,
and so there must be a scene in which the bear amusingly pursues a thief
through the streets of London, and there must be a Cruella De Vil type who
wants to take the stuffed bear and – horrors – stuff him. And exhibit him in a
taxidermy showing, of all things! Well, this is all ridiculous and, to those
who know and love Paddington, close to sacrilegious; but the idea is to bring
in new fans of Paddington, ones who
will presumably not sit still in their media-saturated environment for anything
like warm, homespun tales featuring nice people and gentleness. Oh my, we
simply cannot have anything like that
in the 21st century, now can we?
Families that buy into the
reconstituted Paddington and the film bearing his name have many available takeaways
to continue their enjoyment at home. Paddington:
The Junior Novel is for ages 8-12 and simply retells the film’s story, from
Paddington’s arrival in London to his many adventures and his eventual
realization – typical for films of a certain type – that what matters most is
not gadding about but finding a home and family within which to settle down.
Kids who want to re-live the film’s plot will find it all here, with eight pages of film scenes
as illustrations.
Families that want to use the
film, rather than Bond’s books, to help young children learn to read, can pick
up two movie-based Level 1 books in the “I Can Read!” series. This level,
intended for kids ages 4-8, is designated as “simple sentences for eager new
readers,” and the books accordingly tell their film-based stories – set against
many scenes from the movie – in very simple terms. Meet Paddington is a first-person narrative in which Paddington
tells about himself, the Brown family members whom he meets in London, and the
movie’s evil character, Millicent. Paddington’s
Adventures is a third-person narrative showing and describing film
highlights. Also for kids in the same age range are two books with an even
stronger visual orientation. Their writing is slightly more complex, so they are
best for slightly more advanced readers, but there is nothing really difficult
in either of them. Paddington in London
shows Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament, and other famous places, as
well as close-ups of the movie’s characters, and has Paddington conclude that
“London is a fascinating place.” Paddington’s
World is slightly more unusual, mixing movie scenes with a few things for
kids to do: get Paddington through a maze, create captions for Paddington’s
scrapbook, do a word search for some things associated with Peru, and more. This
is the only one of these five movie tie-in books that goes beyond describing
the film’s plot and showing scenes from it; as such, it is the book most likely
to give kids who enjoy the film something to do beyond simply recalling what
they saw. All these books, though, are intended more as souvenirs than as
serious reading – for that, kids should have any of Bond’s original Paddington
books or any of the adaptations that have been made of them, not featuring
movie scenes but offering wonderful illustrations by Peggy Fortnum or R.W.
Alley (the latest Paddington book has pictures by both). The film may offer
Paddington for the 21st century, but the odds of it being fondly
remembered 50-plus years from now are very small. Bond’s books, on the other
hand, have made it past the half-century mark with their charm intact, and show
every sign of continuing to enchant children for years to come – provided that
parents make it clear that the movie called Paddington
is by no means the first or last word on the stories of a bear called
Paddington.
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