Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Disney lands Tom Hanks for Mary Poppins film 'Saving Mr. Banks'

Tom Hanks may star as Walt Disney himself in Saving Mr. Banks. The Disney-produced film (of course) would chronicle Disney's fourteen-year effort to acquire the film rights to Mary Poppins from its Australian author, P.L. Travers. Emma Thompson would play Travers, who apparently was so unhappy with the film's animated sequences, she never sold another one of her works to the studio. I'm not sure how Disney will fit that tidbit in.


Mary poppinsThe project makes sense in regards to Disney's overall strategy, which is to focus on projects that can be leveraged across all of its different areas of business. The movie could spur people to revisit Mary Poppins (both the 1964 movie and Disney’s Broadway stage production) and buy a copy of the film for their kids, nieces and nephews, etc. However, it's also eyebrow-raising to see that Disney is turning the camera lens on itself. The company is notoriously protective of its brand. Could an accurate portrayal of the relationship between Travers and Disney be compromised by Disney's need to maintain a positive image? Or will it go the friendly King's Speech route, where the worst we saw of the royal family was a tepid take on the Prince Edward scandal and the stereotypical portrayal of uptight royals and customs?


One thing that concerns me about the project is its navel-gazing. Of course Hollywood people who read the script (and probably the critics that review the eventual film) will love seeing an insider portrayal of Hollywood. But will everyone else care? The Travers character might serve as the anti-Hollywood character, an outsider who takes Disney off his high horse. John Lee Hancock, who helmed The Blind Side, has signed on to direct, and that movie was a huge success with people in areas underserved by Hollywood films. Those two elements may broaden the appeal of the project. The screenwriter herself is something of an outsider. Kelly Marcel has few credits to her name, but she's Australian just like the children's author. I, too, never liked the animated sequences in Mary Poppins, so perhaps this film will deliver more than I would expect.


 



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