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Mary Poppins
Mr Banks is looking for a nanny for his two mischievous children and comes across Mary Poppins, an angelic nanny. She not only brings a change in their lives but also spreads happiness.
Release : | 1965 |
Rating : | 7.8 |
Studio : | Walt Disney Productions, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Art Direction, |
Cast : | Julie Andrews Dick Van Dyke David Tomlinson Glynis Johns Hermione Baddeley |
Genre : | Fantasy Comedy Family |
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Reviews
The Age of Commercialism
Good movie but grossly overrated
Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
One of the Top 10 best family films of all time. Great music and one of a kind storyline. Must see for everyone
This movie has a good moral...But boring as hell. Quite annoying actually. Sing and dance and sing and dance for every 1 minute. The song were not even good!. It might be a good entertainment back in 1964, but for now? HELL NO. Even my little sister was bored to sleep she left the tv after 45 minutes.Still waiting for the much refreshed version of Mary Poppins Returns. Disney clearly needed to make the new Mary Poppins so she would still be an Icon.
Just recently, I watched this film with my younger sister, who is pretty much obsessed with the whole "High School Musical" phenomenon. I wanted to show her the musical that defined MY childhood, but wasn't sure how she would react to the dated graphics and themes. I was pleasantly surprised to find that she found the film to be very entertaining, from the goofy songs to the crazy characters to the wacky animation.In all honesty, though, what is not to like about this charming film?! The areas in which the movie excels include:Plot: Simple enough (Nanny swoops down from above to take care of somewhat-neglected children) for children to understand, but with just enough political undertones to keep adults' attention, something that does not occur in HSM (in that series, either you buy into the catchy tunes or you don't...there's no middle ground).Acting: Julie Andrews (as Mary Poppins) and Dick Van Dyke (as chimney-sweep Bert) turn in incredible performances that can be enjoyed by children and adults alike, and there isn't a member of the supporting cast that doesn't bring something interesting to the table.Music: Of course, a musical film is ultimately judged by the success of its musical numbers, and in that case "Mary Poppins" is a rousing success! It would take too long to rate all the musical numbers in this movie, but suffice it to say that they offer something for everyone. I personally love the chimney-sweep's "Step In Time" upbeat dance, while my younger sister's favorite was, as she would said, "the one with the dancing penguins!".Overall, "Mary Poppins" is a movie that can be enjoyed by any and all ages from now until the end of time. Please watch the film to sustain your own craving for nostalgia, then introduce it to your children/relatives to show them that musicals need not be set in high school.
It's an excellent film which served as the screen debut for Julie Andrews, and won this infinitely talented lady a Best Actress Academy Award for this role. Ironically, she only agreed to play the role if she wasn't selected to play Eliza Doolittle, which had made her a star on Broadway, in the film My Fair Lady (1964). Of course, most moviegoers should know that Audrey Hepburn got that role, playing it brilliantly (though her singing voice was dubbed by Marni Nixon), and was subsequently snubbed by the Academy even though that film won Best Picture.Though I've not read any of the "Poppins" books by P. L. Travers, I can't imagine anyone else doing the great job that Ms. Andrews did with the title role. She is simply a joy to watch - "practically perfect in every way"! In fact, all of the characters in this film are terrific as well, from:Reginald Owen as the eccentric Navy Admiral Boom who lives down the street on Cherry Tree Lane, firing his cannon regularly to mark the time (even Greenwich takes it's time from him)Arthur Treacher, in his last on-screen role, as Constable Jonesthe Bank's household staff including Elsa Lanchester, the nanny that quits at the beginning, "Cook" (Reta Shaw) and especially Hermione Baddeley as EllenMrs. Banks (Glynis Jones), the weak but sensitive mother who's preoccupied with women's right to vote as a suffragettethe kids themselves, Jane (Karen Dotrice) and Michael (Matthew Garber), are the model of incorrigible doe-eyed innocence ... love their singing of "The Perfect Nanny" song to their father; that same year, Dotrice & Garber also starred in Disney's The Three Lives of Thomasina (1964), about a catEd Wynn's laughing Uncle Albert (who's uncle is he anyway?) - the Bird Lady (Jane Darwell, The Grapes of Wrath (1940), in her last film)the employees at Mr. Banks' bankBut, other than Ms. Andrews, the person that ties it all together is Dick Van Dyke, quite literally a "jack of all trades", the talented actor plays two characters. The multiple jobs his character Bert takes on includes a one man band, a chalk artist, a chimney sweep, and a kite salesman - all of which he plays believably, and with such an endearing smile too. His elderly Mr. Dawes Sr. is comically credible as well.I particularly like the thread, late in the film, in which Bert explains their Father's responsibilities to the children which is then tied to his "manipulating" Mr. Banks (David Tomlinson) into realizing his neglect of them. In fact, Tomlinson does a terrific job in this, his best role (one year after he was in the Oscar winning Best Picture Tom Jones (1963), and he gets to say some hilariously un-PC lines like "slipshod female thinking" (which is balanced by the line that Mrs. Banks sings "though we adore men individually, we agree that as a group they're rather stupid"). The "manipulation" scenes of Banks by Mary are also a kick.Both Andrews and Van Dyke are singing talents and the film is loaded with an excellent (Oscar winning) score that includes: "A Spoonful of Sugar", "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" (#36 on AFI's 100 Top Movie Songs of All Time list), "Chim-Chim-Cheree" (the Oscar winner), and "Step in Time" - the choreography in this segment is magical - among others. In addition to (and out of) these melodies, the film gives us many memorable lines:"A British bank is run with precision, a British home requires nothing less; tradition, discipline and rules, must be the tools""For every job that must be done, there is an element of fun. Find the fun and SNAP, the job's a game""a pie crust promise ... easily made and easily broken""Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious""I know a man with a wooden leg named Smith ... what was the name of his other leg?""Though her words are simple and few, listen, listen, she's calling to you", andLet's go fly a kiteThe only negative about the film is its length. It's weakest part, IMO, is the mixed live action and animation segment, when Mary and the children enter Bert's chalk paintings. Though very imaginative (and perhaps the chief reason the film won the Best Effects Oscar), it drags a bit during the uninspired song "Jolly Holiday". However, the sequence does end strongly with the "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" number. I also think the part with Uncle Albert on the ceiling (as well as the scene at the bank with its officers and the children?) is somewhat overlong too. The film itself runs over 2 hours and 20 minutes, and I can remember it "feeling" so even as a child.Overall all, though, it is an outstanding film which was recognized, in addition to Ms. Andrews' Oscar, with Academy Awards for Best Effects, Editing, Song (Chim-Chim-Cheree), and Best Music, Score - Substantially Original and also received nominations for Best Picture, Best Director (Robert Stevenson, his only), Screenplay, Sound, Best Music, Scoring of Music (Adaptation or Treatment), Color Cinematography, Art Direction, and Costume Design. It is also Walt Disney's most successful single film for this type of recognition. #6 on AFI's 25 Greatest Movie Musicals list. Added to the National Film Registry in 2013.