Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks in Saving Mr. Banks |
“Saving
Mrs.Travers”
A Review of Saving Mr. Banks by Nick Olszyk
MPAA Rating, PG-13
USCCB Rating, A-II
Reel Rating, Three Reels
There
are two wars being waged in Saving Mr.
Banks: an external battle between the impeccably proper and British Mrs. P.L.
Travers and the handshaking bigger-than-life American Walt Disney over the film
version of the classic book series Mary
Poppins as well as an internal battle Travers wages privately against her
own broken childhood that spills over the pages of her literary treasures. She
fights the former in order to get her way in the latter. Mr. Banks is a pleasant film with excellent performances and a
little bit to say about the role of the imagination, but, similar its central protagonist,t
feels a bit stogy like day old tea. It’s a good movie but a small asterisk next
to the 1964 classic Mary Poppins, one
of the greatest films in history.
P.L. Travers and
Walt Disney are perfectly matched: both are strong willed and use their
imaginations to work out their hopes and fears of life. In addition, however, Disney
is a shrewd businessman and entertainer while Travers refuses to publish any
more books. Despite her immense disdain for Disney’s world of pixie dust and
undeserved smiles, he has money to give, and she needs it badly. Disney has been hounding her for twenty years
hoping to get the rights to Travers’ books on a promise he made to his
daughters. When he relents to giving her final script approval, she finally
agrees.
Despite their arrangement,
the story process is anything but smooth. Right from the beginning, Disney
fills Travers’ hotel room with stuffed animals and fruit baskets thinking it
will placate but only serves to infuriate her more. Too bad — those early 60s plush
Mickeys are probably worth thousands today. Travers likes almost nothing about Don
DaGradi’s script including the songs, the animation, and Mr. Banks’ mustache
which was personally requested by Disney himself. It seems as if Mary Poppins will never fly. “These
characters are family to me,” Travers explains, “and I won’t have you turn them
into one of your silly cartoons.” Travers is speaking literally; through a
series of flashbacks, it is learned that she came from a very troubled home
that included an alcoholic father and suicidal mother. Things only start to
look up a little when her aunt Ellie comes to take care of the family.
As a film, Saving Mr. Banks feels oddly
constricted. Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks are fantastic as the title characters
— Emma a little more than Tom. Apart from its star talent, however, the film is
restrained, claustrophobic, and a little slow. Ninety percent of the movie
occurs on only four sets that are sparsely decorated, almost like the producers
ran out of money, but this is Walt Disney Pictures so that would be impossible.
Everybody is
born broken by original sin, and humanity creates stories to help itself work
out its problems. From Pandora to Osiris to Loki, ancient peoples have tried to
make sense of suffering. This continues today in fiction. Tolkein wrote that
fantasy is the highest form of art because it allows men to be a “sub-creator.”
The difference between paganism and fantasy is that pagans worship their
creations while fantasy writers understand their works are only symbols of a
greater reality, including Mary Poppins.
At first Disney
doesn’t recognize this aspect of Travers writing, but neither does Travers of
Disney. She thinks his creations are “silly cartoons” but Pinocchio, Sleeping Beauty,
and The Jungle Book are Disney’s ways
of working out his inner demons as well. A good example of this is the Missing
Mother Syndrome that permeates almost every Disney film from Snow White to Frozen. Contrary to popular myth, Disney’s mother did not die when
he was young, but it’s a great way to identify with a main character. We are
all orphans separated from God. Travers, too, creates these stories to give the
father she loved dearly the redemption he never found in real life. Disney
tells Travers that sharing this pain will help rather than hurt her father, and
even shares his own marred past with his father Elias. “Children will rejoice”
when Mr. Banks is reconciled with Jane and Michael, he tells her. Only when she
sees he understands does she give him the rights to her work.
The theologian
Peter Kreeft observed that “Christianity has always been a little suspicious of
the imagination.” The real Mr. Banks died an alcoholic estranged from his
heartbroken daughter; is the happy ending of Mary Poppins a terrible lie? It is untruthful as a historical fact,
but it is truthful as a spark of hope from an older and wiser Travers. It is
her expression of forgiveness towards her father, and that is not a lie. What
neither Travers nor Disney understands is while imagination is good; real life
is better. In his desire to make a world of happiness and boundless creativity,
Disney neglected those closest to him. Travers never got married, but she did
adopt one son later in life. Christianity is unique in being both a compelling
archetypical story and amazingly true history. If you liked the Book, you’ll
love the Real Presence. Life must be imagined then lived. Live vicariously
through yourself.
This article first appeared in Catholic World Report on December 28th, 2013. http://www.catholicworldreport.com/Blog/2814/saving_mrs_travers.aspx#.UunQuj1dWSp
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