‘Mary Poppins Returns’ Review: Emily Blunt Soars in a Wondrous Musical

Mara Reinstein
Mara Movies
Published in
4 min readDec 12, 2018

Don’t worry, Mary Poppins is here. And though the stylish British nanny looks a bit different than you may remember, she’s still super-talented at bringing eye-popping wonder and whimsy into the lives of everyone around her. Supercalifragilisticexpealidocious, in fact. That’s why the best thing you could do for yourself right now is let the fantastical Disney musical Mary Poppins Returns — a sequel 54 years in the making — sing and dance its way into your heart. After all, pure cinematic joy doesn’t come around very often.

Emily Blunt takes over the role made famous by Julie Andrews. That sentence alone may seem sacrilege to everyone who’s ever seen and subsequently fallen in love with the 1964 original. Not that Blunt isn’t a beguiling talent. It’s just that Andrews, who won a Best Actress Oscar for the performance, embodied the part with dazzling perfection to the point were her performance is part of the fabric our childhoods. Replacing her is akin to replacing Judy Garland’s Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz. (Fun fact: This actually happened in the 1980s! It didn’t go well.) But Blunt proves herself a worthy, divine successor with a lovely soprano singing voice to match.

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Come on and just enjoy the ride. You know you want to. (Disney)

Some 30 years have passed since Mary Poppins last saw the neglected Banks siblings of London’s 17 Cherry Tree Lane. Jane (Emily Mortimer) and Michael (Ben Wishaw) are now grown. He has three small children of his own. Their parents have passed, as has Michael’s wife. They’re also knee-deep in a financial crisis: The evil people at the bank, led by Colin Firth’s meanie of a manager, want to repossess their house. The only way the Banks’ can solve their problems is to unearth a lost evidentiary document.

In conclusion, the time is right for Mary to swoop in on her kite. Everyone is thrilled to see her — though the adults are reluctant to believe that her magic was a reality. But nobody is more excited than her old friend Jack (Lin-Manuel Miranda, perfectly cast), a jolly streetlamp-lighter who once apprenticed under Bert the chimney sweeper. You will not see Bert in Mary Poppins Returns. But you will see Dick Van Dyke, the legendary, now-93-year-old actor who played him. To reveal anything more would dampen the happiest big-screen moment of 2018.

Mary and Jack take the children on candy-colored journeys that stretch their imaginations. In the most elaborate sequence, they sing and tap-dance on a stage with a slew of adorable two-dimensional, non-computer-generated animated characters. It’s a nod to the classic, a scene in which Mary and Bert do their thing with animatronic penguins. The scene, btw, also made Mary Poppins author P.L Travers furious because it strayed so much from her original vision.

This brings me to an important point. All the production numbers — and the straight-forward story, for that matter — are of the earnest, sweet, non-subversive variety. Think a hard G-rating. I hesitate to use the word “old-fashioned” because that intonates boring. I just hope kids experiencing the Mary Poppins character for the first time will bask in the wholesomeness despite a lack of inside pop culture references or a scene in which Wreck-It Ralph makes a clever viral video inside the Internet.

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Might as well jump. Right, kids? (Disney).

Director Rob Marshall (Chicago) made another risky decision by featuring all-new songs and musical score. You won’t hear traces of “Feed the Birds” or “Go Fly a Kite” — or a hip-hop verse via Hamilton maestro Miranda. Hairspray composers Marc Shaiman and Scott Witter took care of the soundtrack, including a toe-tapper called “Trip a Little Light Fantastic.” The songs are catchy and snappy, but will they still be treasured in 60-odd years, a la “A Spoonful of Sugar”? Eh. . . . doubtful. There’s a bit of indistinguishable same-ness to them. One exception? Meryl Streep, of course. As a batty relative living on her own on the edge of town, she doesn’t so much as sing as spews out a delightful ditty. Bonus: The Devil Wears Prada reunion with Blunt. That’s all.

I could go on. The run time. The predictable “twist.” Whatever. Nitpicking examples in which this musical fails to measure up to a piece of art is counterproductive. Sequels themselves are prone to disappointment; a follow-up to friggin’ Mary Poppins is a fool’s errand. Best to just regard Mary Poppins Returns as a sincerely wonderful homage to an all-time great. Do that and the film doesn’t just fly like a kite, it soars.

Mary Poppins Returns opens in theaters on Wednesday, December 19

Originally published at Mara Movies.

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Mara Reinstein
Mara Movies

Mara Reinstein is the film critic of Us Weekly. She is also a contributing writer for Parade, The Cut, Variety, Emmy and TV Guide. She lives in New York City.