Mel’s
Cine-Files
By
Melissa Agar
Saving
Mr. Banks (Walt Disney Pictures, 2013) –
Director: John Lee Hancock. Writers: Kelly Marcel, Sue Smith. Cast:
Tom Hanks, Emma Thompson, Annie Rose Buckley, Colin Farrell, Ruth
Wilson, Paul Giamatti, Bradley Whitford, Rachel Griffiths, Jason
Schewartzman, & B.J. Novak. Color, 125 minutes.
I
love behind-the-scenes tales. I’m one of those people who gobbles
up books or documentaries that offer glimpses into the creative
processes that have led to great films or shows or albums. As someone
who dabbles in the creative arts myself, I am fascinated to see how
the process works. The prospect, then, of a film telling the tale of
the creation of one of the most beloved films in the Disney canon
drew me like a fly to honey so much so that when my local multiplex
failed to give Saving Mr. Banks a screen this
holiday season, I decided to drive nearly an hour away to see it.
Unfortunately, I ended up making the trip for a film that failed to
engage me on the level I’d hoped.
Saving
Mr. Banks is two films in one. On one level, it tells
the story of how Walt Disney (Hanks) finally struck a deal with
prickly author PL Travers (Thompson) to bring Mary Poppins to
the screen. Disney spent 20 years trying to woo Travers into signing
over the rights to her magical nanny. It is only when money has grown
tight that Travers is convinced to meet with Disney and see what he
has in store for her beloved character. She sits in on writing
sessions with screenwriter Don DaGradi (Whitford) and composers
Robert and Richard Sherman (Novak and Schwartzman respectively),
fighting the trio every turn on issues both significant, like her
insistence that the film not be animated, and trivial, like the name
of Mrs. Banks.
Interspersed throughout this story are flashbacks to
Travers’s childhood in Australia. As Disney learns, Travers grew up
as Helen “Ginty” Goff (Buckley). Her father, Travers Goff
(Farrell), is a bank manager whose alcoholism stands in the way of
any sort of career success but whose playful spirit makes him a hero
to his young daughter. As Ginty begins to understand the severity of
her father’s problems, his health falters, forcing her mother
(Wilson) to send for her sister, the “dreaded” Aunt Ellie
(Griffiths) who shows up with a giant carpetbag and immediately
begins putting the Goff house back in order.
It
is the dual nature of the film’s narrative that ultimately makes it
less than satisfying. Had the film stayed with the Disney/Travers
standoff, it would have worked much better. This part of the film is
tremendously engaging and entertaining, largely thanks to Hanks and
Thompson who deliver fine performances. Hanks uses his natural charm
to bring the gregarious Disney to life. He oozes charm from every
pore as he pulls out the stops to win Travers over, not realizing
that that charm is what is pushing her even further away. Disney is
not a man used to failing and yet he remains largely unflappable as
Travers digs her heels in at every turn. Hanks brings a great sense
of humanity to the role; a monologue he has toward film’s end about
his childhood in Missouri could land him an Oscar nomination and was
a moment where I felt truly drawn into the film on an emotional
level.
Thompson
is a perfect foil for Hanks’s charm. Her Travers is prickly and
disapproving and would easily be completely unlikable in the hands of
a lesser actor. Thompson, though, finds the loneliness that lies
beneath the disapproval, and that desperate loneliness and sadness
shines through her eyes. She is a woman who has built a wall around
her heart and isn’t exactly sure how to overcome it so she pushes
away those who may try to befriend her. She insists on formalities –
she is horrified when not addressed formally as “Mrs. Travers.”
She is initially dismissive of Ralph (Giamatti), the kindly driver
who is assigned to her by Disney Studios, disdaining his pleasantries
and attempts at small talk. Ralph, though, seems to sense the
loneliness and persists, becoming perhaps the closest thing the
writer has had to a friend in quite some time. Thompson makes
this all work and creates a nuanced, complicated character, leaving
the audience not sure who to root for as Disney tries to win her
over.
The
problem with Saving Mr. Banks lies in the Australian
flashbacks. They break up the narrative flow of the film, stranding
us at times in the outback with, to be honest, lesser actors and
characters. Farrell tries his hardest to make Travers Goff charming,
but he just comes across as childish and reckless. It doesn’t help
that he’s stranded with little to work with. The Australian
sequences are often melodramatic (the scene where little Ginty is
confronted by her mother for giving Travers alcohol had my eyes
rolling harder than dice at an Atlantic City casino) and predictable.
You can pretty much tell the fate of the Goff family within minutes,
but we get these scenes spread out over two hours leading us to the
inevitable conclusion, all time taken away from the Disney/Travers
sequences that are hugely entertaining and engaging. I understand the
need for the Australian sequences in terms of establishing why
Travers is the way she is and why she’s so protective of her work,
but perhaps a prologue scene at the beginning would have worked
better and allowed us to become fully immersed in the battle for Mary
Poppins rather than being mired in an Australian soap opera that left
me groaning with disappointment every time one of the flashback
sequences kicked in.
I
really wanted to like this film. Thompson is one of my absolute
favorite actors, and she is splendid here and surrounded by winning
support at every turn. The problem is that the film shoots itself in
the foot by trying to be too much and not trusting the audience to
read between the lines a little more to infer Travers’s motivation.
There is an A film here, but it’s spliced together with a bunch of
C- flashback sequences, making Saving Mr. Banks overall
a B. Sometimes too much is too much.
Grade:
B
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