Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (2018)
Cast
- Meryl Streep as Donna Sheridan
- Lily James as Young Donna Sheridan
- Amanda Seyfried as Sophie Sheridan
- Pierce Brosnan as Sam Carmichael
- Colin Firth as Harry Bright
- Stellan Skarsgård as Bill Anderson
- Dominic Cooper as Sky
- Julie Walters as Rosie Mulligan
- Christine Baranski as Tanya Chesham-Leigh
- Andy García as Fernando
- Cher as Ruby Sheridan
Director
- Ol Parker
Writer
- Ol Parker
Director of Photography
- Robert D. Yeoman
Comedy, Music, Romance
120 minutes
If you loved the first “Mamma Mia!” movie back in 2008, well, “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again” offers even more—and even less.
The
sequel (which is also a prequel) features a bigger cast, a longer
running time, extra subplots and additional romantic entanglements. But
it’s emptier than its predecessor and has even lower stakes. It’s less
entertaining, and for all its frantic energy, it manages to go
absolutely nowhere.
Once again inspired by the music of ABBA and
set on a picturesque Greek island, the second “Mamma Mia!” is the
lightest piece of Swedish pastry with the sweetest chunk of baklava on
the side. And while that may sound delicious, it’s likely to give you a
toothache (as well as a headache).
At one point, during a particularly clunky musical number, I wrote
in my notes: “I am so uncomfortable right now.” But while the goofy
imperfection of this song-and-dance extravaganza is partially the
point—and theoretically, a source of its charm—it also grows repetitive
and wearying pretty quickly.
No single moment reaches the infectious joy of Meryl Streep
writhing around in a barn in overalls performing the title song in the
original film, or the emotional depth of her singing “The Winner Takes
It All” to Pierce Brosnan.
Along those lines, if you’re looking forward to seeing Streep show off
her playful, musical side again, you’re going to be disappointed.
Despite her prominent presence in the movie’s marketing materials, she’s
barely in it.
That’s because Streep’s free-spirited Donna has
died, we learn at the film’s start, but her presence is felt everywhere
in weepy ways. Her daughter, Sophie (Amanda Seyfried),
is re-opening the inn her mom ran—now christened the Hotel Bella
Donna—on the same idyllic (and fictional) Greek island of Kalokairi
where the first film took place. Writer-director Ol Parker
(whose relevant experience includes writing those “Best Exotic Marigold
Hotel” movies) jumps back and forth in time between Sophie nervously
putting the finishing touches on the big party she’s planning and the
story of how her mother originally ended up on this remote slab of land
in the Aegean Sea—and became pregnant with Sophie in the late 1970s
without being entirely sure of who the father was.
First, there’s the skittish Harry (Hugh Skinner), who tries to charm her with his halting French in Paris. Next comes the sexy Swede Bill (Josh Dylan), who woos her on the boat that carries her out to the island. Finally, there’s aspiring architect Sam (Jeremy Irvine), who’s already vacationing on Kalokairi when she arrives. They will grow up to be Colin Firth, Stellan Skarsgard and Brosnan, respectively, and they will be forced into singing ABBA songs that clearly make them miserable.
Ah
yes, the ABBA songs. They provided the confectionery connective tissue
for the smash-hit stage musical and the original movie. This time, the
‘70s Swedish supergroup’s tunes that are the most rapturous are also
replays from the first go-round: a flotilla of fishermen singing and
prancing to “Dancing Queen,” or the splashy finale uniting the whole
cast for “Super Trouper.” Much of the soundtrack consists of
lesser-known songs, and the uninspired way those numbers are staged and
choreographed rarely allows them to soar.
Once again, though,
these actors are such pros that they can’t help but make the most of
their meager material. Baranski and Walters in particular have crackling
chemistry again. The brief moments in which the supremely overqualified
Firth, Skarsgard and Brosnan pal around with each other as Sophie’s
three dads made me long to see them together in something else. Anything
else. A documentary in which they have lunch on the porch under sunny
Greek skies, even.
And then Cher shows up. Now, it would seem
impossible for this superstar goddess ever to be restrained. But as
Sophie’s frequently absent grandmother, Cher seems weirdly reined in.
Again, it’s the awkwardness of the choreography: She just sort of stands
there, singing “Fernando,” before stiffly walking down a flight of
stairs to greet the person to whom she’s singing. (As the hotel’s
caretaker, Andy Garcia conveniently plays a character named Fernando, which is an amusing bit.)
But
if you’re down for watching A-list stars belt out insanely catchy,
40-year-old pop tunes in a shimmering setting, and you’re willing to
throw yourself headlong into the idea of love’s transformative power,
and you just need a mindless summer escape of your own, you might just
thoroughly enjoy watching “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again.” Don’t think,
and pass the ouzo.
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