Mamma Mia — Yes, Again

So let’s get to what you really want to know about the weirdly schizophrenic sequel/prequel to the charming 2008 blockbuster film, “Mamma Mia!”

Does Meryl Streep appear? Yes and no (more later).

Does Cher appear? Yes, thank goodness, about 20 minutes before the movie ends. 

 Is it terrible? No, although it often seems so. Despite a muddle-headed script and some of the most ridiculous one-liners in recent film history, there is a kind of creaky charm about the whole enterprise.

Now to the details. Whereas Phyllida Lloyd directed the first movie with a rather stern, no-nonsense hand, she had Streep, a cast of stars and all the ABBA  ’70s pop hits, songs so infectious and well made that they still make you want to dance. The new film is directed and co-written by Ol Parker, who obviously was more interested in the gorgeous Greek-island scenery, the Aegean and the game of hurtling his audience back and forth in time than in making sense. He has delivered a gorgeous color palette and a lot of stunning photography, and some set numbers are terrific. “Waterloo,” set in a Paris cafe and partially sung live, is contagiously exuberant. 

The plot goes like this: Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) is about to open a hotel on the Greek island of Kalokairi (actually Skopelos) to honor the memory of her mother,  Donna (Streep), who has died of unexplained causes — ABBAitis, perhaps? Before the opening her husband, Sky (Dominic Cooper), says he can’t take it and is leaving her for New York. As Sophie prepares for her gala opening, her de facto aunts (Christine Baranski and Julie Walters) tell of the joys and challenges her mother faced at Oxford and after.

Young Donna (played with breathtaking brio by Lily James) comes to the island by way of Paris, where she slept with three young men (Hugh Skinner, Josh Dylan and Jeremy Irvine). The real importance is that we meet the three men who will become Sophie’s “fathers” (the first movie centered on determining which man was her biological dad; they all decided to share the title): Sam (Pierce Brosnan), Harry (Colin Firth) and Bill (Stellan Skarsgard), all rather wonderful, although Brosnan’s singing voice has the resonance and inflection of a dial tone.

Director Parker works hard to make his audience happy, but when the movie goes off the rails it does so with almost determined gusto. Fortunately late in the film a helicopter descends on the island and a white-garbed, platinum-wigged Cher emerges to re-energize everyone as Ruby, Sophie’s grandmother. (No, do not worry that at 72 Cher is only three years older than her deceased movie daughter, Streep. No one who goes to this movie will think twice about it.)

Soon Cher spies a former lover, Fernando (Andy Garcia, who seems embarrassed by the whole situation), and with her incomparable baritone belts out, what else, “Fernando.” Than Streep’s ghost appears to tug at our hearts with a genuinely emotional “The Day Before You Came.” Finally the whole cast — yes, the young actors from Paris and their grownup selves too, everyone who even got a nose in front of the camera — belts out “Super Trouper” and dances into the sunset. 

 

“Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again” is playing widely.

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