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A jolly holiday musical

- By Michael Phillips Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips is a Tribune critic. mjphillips@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @phillipstr­ibune.com

Families could do a lot worse this holiday season than to take out a home equity loan for a bucket of multiplex popcorn and take in “Mary Poppins Returns,” director Rob Marshall’s hectic sequel to the 1964 Disney musical cherished by millions.

Those who don’t want their memories of the original messed with unduly can take comfort in how the sequel’s storyline follows the narrative and musical beats of the original, right down to a radically square 2-D animation sequence. And it’s hard to imagine either slaves to the ’64 musical or newcomers of any age having a problem with Emily Blunt.

The actress’ incarnatio­n of the magical, gently fearsome nanny created by author P.L.Travers (who hated Disney’s version) suggests a hint of the paradoxica­l imperious sparkle Julie Andrews brought to Mary Poppins. Then Blunt adds streaks of witty, sly playfulnes­s that are more her thing. And it all works.

The costumes do a lot for Blunt’s characteri­zation. “Mary Poppins Returns” takes place 24 years after “Mary Poppins,” in 1934. The effects of the global economic downturn feed into screenwrit­er David Magee’s misery-adjacent storyline concerning the grown-up Banks children. Grieving widower Michael (Ben

Whishaw, quite moving) is raising young John (Nathanael Saleh), Annabel (Pixie Davies) and Georgie (Joel Dawson), while the children’s aunt, Jane (Emily Mortimer), pays homage to her late mother’s interest in the suffrage movement with her own organized labor efforts.

The plot deals with a threatened foreclosur­e on the Banks family home at 17 Cherry Tree Lane, London, and greedy capitalist pigs personifie­d by the steely two-faced banker played by Colin Firth. But then there’s Mary, who arrives via kite this time, and swans around in fabulously smart ’30s hats and delightful footwear.

All hail costume designer Sandy Powell! Her work for all the characters here evokes ’34, the ’64 Disney film and fantasy realms that know no boundaries.

Lin-Manuel Miranda, that “Hamilton” chap, takes second billing as Jack the lamplighte­r, who we’re told was once apprentice to chimney sweep Bert. You’ll recall Dick Van Dyke in that role back in ’64. In “Mary Poppins Returns” Van Dyke, now 92, more or less reprises the cameo he played in the first Disney “Poppins” film. It’s a serious treat to see Van Dyke jump up on a table and soft-shoe a few bars, as the son of the ancient banker, Dawes.

Director Marshall stages things with workmanlik­e efficiency. The movie piles on, the barrage of effects and diversions largely dictated by the demands of the animation interludes and the surfeit of routine digital effects. The 2-D vignette, in which Mary, Jack and the kids pop into a porcelain bowl illustrati­on for a mad chase sequence, almost works, but it too sweats and strains for the magic.

 ?? WALT DISNEY STUDIOS ?? Emily Blunt stars as the magical P.L. Travers nanny.
WALT DISNEY STUDIOS Emily Blunt stars as the magical P.L. Travers nanny.

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