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Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Saving Mr. Banks

Speranza


Emma Thompson is superb as Mary Poppins author PL Travers as she tries to resist Walt Disney's transformation of her famous creation.

Anyone who has seen and loved Mary Poppins as much as I have knows one thing for certain.

"Mary Poppins" is NOT about the kids.

For all its riotous scenes of young Jane and Michael having tea parties on the ceiling and jumping through chalk pavement pictures, it's the uptight Mr Banks who is the real target of Poppins's attentions, as she seeks to break him out of his "bank-shaped cage" and reconnect him with what really matters – his family.

No wonder the enduring Disney classic ends with Mr Banks himself leading everyone in a tear-jerking chorus of Let's Go Fly a Kite.

After all, it was his story all along.

This is the central thrust of Saving Mr Banks, a lovely, sentimental and quietly insightful account of the making of Mary Poppins that traces the roots of Helen Lyndon Goff''s most famous creation to the author's personal paternal past.

Flitting between her childhood in Australia and her later life in London, we see Helen Lyndon Goff being both enchanted and traumatised by her banker father Travers, an alcoholic dreamer with an ebulliently infantile streak whose first name she significantly adopts as a nom de plume.

Positing Rachel Griffiths's sternly haired, pointy-toed "Aunt Ellie" as a potential role model for Poppins herself, the film paints its inspirational back story with broad pop-psychology strokes, drifting between credible biography and fanciful invention with the dexterity of revellers on a Jolly 'Oliday cheerfully dancing with animated penguins.

The meat of this tale takes place in California, where Tom Hanks's tough but avuncular Walt Disney is attempting to convince Emma Thompson's brilliantly snippy "Mrs Travers".

-- "It is so discomforting to hear a perfect stranger use my first name" --

to sign over the rights to her most treasured creation.

Having promised his children that he would bring "our beloved Mary" to the screen, Walt finds himself being snubbed, scolded and generally sniped at by the author who repeatedly says that "Mary Poppins – never just 'Mary' – is not for sale!".

Yet for all her objections to his "silly cartoons", Travers needs Walt's "cold heartless money" (as Bert would say), and thus the two are locked together amid the fairy castles of Disneyland to resolve their differences, with the help of the Sherman brothers, whose gorgeous songs get an equally tough time from the tight-lipped tyrant.

Cue a succession of hilariously exasperating "creative" meetings in which Travers airily dismisses some of the most sublimely inspired sequences of musical-fantasy cinema with the air of a stern school ma'am striking a red pen through the homework of an irksome pupil.

A real-life audio recording of one of those meetings played during the end credits reveals that Thompson isn't over-egging the snippiness in the slightest.

 Walt Disney (Tom Hanks) and PL Travers (Emma Thompson) in Saving Mr Banks. Photograph: Fran Ois Duhamel

That Travers never actually reconciled herself with the Disneyfication of Poppins (she vetoed any further films) doesn't matter.

Saving Mr Banks wants us to take the truth with a spoonful of sugar, and The Blind Side director John Lee Hancock juggles the affectionate and the abrasive with ease, creating a scrumptious confection with a soft heart, a tart edge and just the right amount of reality.

This being a Disney production, one might assume that history had been duly whitewashed, but the original screenplay (which was on the 2011 "black list" of hottest scripts) was written without House of Mouse involvement, and once on board their only major stipulation was to insist that Walt did not smoke on screen.

He does however drink and drive a hard bargain, with Hanks confidently portraying the steely resolve behind the twinkling smile and welcoming arms, reminding us that Disney's passion for a Poppins movie was underwritten by the power to make it happen, to get his own way in the end, whether Travers liked it or not.

As for Thompson, who did such a great Scary Mary turn in the Nanny McPhee films, she is sheer perfection in the complex role of "Mrs PL", never allowing the author to descend into crotchety caricature, constantly suggesting a strain of melancholia behind the biting, control-freaky hautiness.

As always, her comic timing is impeccable (she plays the script like Paganini played the violin), but what makes her performance soar is the precisely choreographed physicality.

The tiniest stretch of the lip, an arch angling of the head, the folding of her arms – somewhere between aggressive and defensive.

For all the terse quips and personal reserve, Thompson dances her way through Travers's conflicting emotions, giving us a fully rounded portrait of a person who is hard to like but impossible not to love (although the Shermans may have begged to differ).

Travers actively disliked Disney's movie, but no matter.

Ultimately, they didn't make it for her.

On the other hand, as a diehard Thompsonite who considers Mary Poppins one of the 10 best movies ever made, they appear to have made Saving Mr Banks for me.

And I loved it.




Can Tom Hanks rescue Walt Disney from Saving Mr Banks?

The actor delivers another charmer, but this story about Mary Poppins is more atrocious than supercalifragilisticexpialidocious

What Saving Mr Banks tells us about the original Mary Poppins

 The Guardian Film Show: Saving Mr Banks, Carrie and Jeune et Jolie – video review
Saving Mr Banks – review
 Saving Mr Banks star Emma Thompson: 'PL Travers would have rather looked down upon film' - video
Saving Mr Banks: trashing Mrs Travers?
 Saving Mr Banks - watch Tom Hanks in the trailer for a film about the making of Mary Poppins
 Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson at Saving Mr Banks premiere - video
Saving Mr Banks: London film festival – first look review
Oscar predictions 2014: Saving Mr Banks
Saving Mr Banks trailer hits web – with Tom Hanks starring as Walt Disney
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Saving Mr Banks – review
28 Nov 2013
There's a sorry lack of spark between Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks, but then this is a Disney film about Mary Poppins, says Peter Bradshaw
27 Nov 2013
Saving Mr Banks star Emma Thompson: 'PL Travers would have rather looked down upon film' - video
26 Nov 2013
Saving Mr Banks: trashing Mrs Travers?
12 Nov 2013
Saving Mr Banks - watch Tom Hanks in the trailer for a film about the making of Mary Poppins

Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson at Saving Mr Banks premiere - video
21 Oct 2013
Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson brave the wet weather on Sunday for the London premiere of their new film Saving Mr Banks

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