‘Paddington in Peru’ required a prop passport, but Paddington Bear ended up with a real one.
Paddington Bear is headed home to Peruâwith a little help from the Home Office. After exploring England for two whole movies, Paddington Bear is finally headed back to his homeland of Peru for the franchiseâs third installment, aptly named Paddington in Peru and premiering in the UK on November 8. (Itâs not slated to hit U.S. theaters until January 17, 2025.) To leave the country Paddington needed a passport, so producers requested one from the UKâs Home Officeâa fake one, that is, just for use as a prop. âWe wrote to the Home Office, asking if we could get a replica, and they actually issued Paddington with an official passportâthereâs only one of these,â co-producer Rob Silva told Radio Times. âYou wouldnât think the Home Office would have a sense of humour, but under official observations, theyâve just listed him as Bear.â The film will follow Paddington and his whole adoptive family, the Browns (including housekeeper Mrs. Bird, played by Julie Walters), as they embark on a quest through the Amazon to locate his missing Aunt Lucy. The cast needed real passports, too, since they spent two months shooting on location in Peru and Colombia (though Ben Whishaw, who voices Paddington, recorded all of his audio in London). Paddington didnât always hail from Peru. In early drafts, writer Michael Bond had him originating in Africaâbefore Bondâs agent told him that Africa isnât home to any bears. Peru, meanwhile, plays host to the Andean bear (a.k.a. the spectacled bear), South Americaâs only bear species. Ergo, Paddington is a spectacled bear. And while his real-life counterparts donât come upon marmalade in the wild, theyâd probably like it: Andean bears are big fans of fruit. manual © 2024 Minute Media – All Rights Reserved