Paddington Pop Up Book scene
A lovely little bit of digital animation.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 16:37, Share, Reply)
A lovely little bit of digital animation.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 16:37, Share, Reply)
It's good
slightly spoiled for me because I kept getting something in my eye. Lurve the schmaltz, me.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:44, Share, Reply)
slightly spoiled for me because I kept getting something in my eye. Lurve the schmaltz, me.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:44, Share, Reply)
It's excellent.
I think the definition of "National Treasure" will have to be rewritten to say, "has had a cameo in a Paddington film" because, frankly, everyone seems to be in it.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:45, Share, Reply)
I think the definition of "National Treasure" will have to be rewritten to say, "has had a cameo in a Paddington film" because, frankly, everyone seems to be in it.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:45, Share, Reply)
I thought it was above average family fare.
Don't really understand the rapturous reception.
Maybe I'm just an old cunt.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:58, Share, Reply)
Don't really understand the rapturous reception.
Maybe I'm just an old cunt.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:58, Share, Reply)
Before Christmas, Foyle's were hawking a real live book based on the one in the movie
The best way I can describe it is "the absolute minimum required to stay out of Trade Descriptions court."
The opening spread is Paddington behind a lift-up door (a la "Where's Spot") which is just enough to encourage your sprog to get their sticky fingers into the second spread, which is of Tower Bridge and, credit where it's due, right out of the film - an excellent, multi-layered feat of paper engineering. Then you get Piccadilly Circus, which just sort of has a bus on it. Then you get Paddington back home at Windsor Gardens, the only pop-up part being the titular bear and his Great Aunt. And that's it.
The sprog managed to destroy Tower Bridge on Boxing Day while enthusiastically "showing it to Granny".
£20 well spent!
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:44, Share, Reply)
The best way I can describe it is "the absolute minimum required to stay out of Trade Descriptions court."
The opening spread is Paddington behind a lift-up door (a la "Where's Spot") which is just enough to encourage your sprog to get their sticky fingers into the second spread, which is of Tower Bridge and, credit where it's due, right out of the film - an excellent, multi-layered feat of paper engineering. Then you get Piccadilly Circus, which just sort of has a bus on it. Then you get Paddington back home at Windsor Gardens, the only pop-up part being the titular bear and his Great Aunt. And that's it.
The sprog managed to destroy Tower Bridge on Boxing Day while enthusiastically "showing it to Granny".
£20 well spent!
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 18:44, Share, Reply)
Yep, seeing it here -
bookshop.blackwell.co.uk/bookshop/product/9780008254520?gclid=Cj0KCQiAyszSBRDJARIsAHAqQ4p_mh8Jeb10aoNQ12lP76cRtzhmPd5XnFnr2K_eym21EvHPcFhr3BQaAsOjEALw_wcB
My kid used to rip up books regardless. Very frustrating.
( , Mon 8 Jan 2018, 21:30, Share, Reply)