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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, July 18, 2008

MOVIE REVIEW
Golden oldies save clumsy flick

By Roger Moore
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

From left, Julie Walters as Rosie, Meryl Streep as Donna and Christine Baranski as Tanya in the movie version of "Mamma Mia!"

Universal Pictures

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'MAMMA MIA!'

PG-13, for sex-related comments

108 minutes

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"Mamma Mia!" is a pajama party of a musical, a stay-up-too-late, sing-in-front-of-the-mirror/hairbrush-as-microphone, giggle-with-your-girlfriends, worry- about-the-mess-afterward romp. It gets by on the featherweight golden oldies of ABBA and the treat of seeing and hearing some golden oldies of the cinema break character and belt out a song.

This took some guts. Pierce Brosnan risked life and limb many an outing as James Bond. But he's never been braver than he is here, wooing the old flame (Meryl Streep) with a close-to-on-key cover of ABBA's "S.O.S."

Brosnan, like the rest of the cast (Colin Firth, Julie Walters, Stellan Skarsgard and Christine Baranski among them) puts these vintage bubblegum tunes over with star charisma alone.

The plot, concocted for the stage as a vehicle for ABBA songs, shows its clumsy patchwork on the big screen. Twenty-year-old Sophie (Amanda Seyfried), raised in Greece, invites three men to her wedding, mom's old flames, one of whom she is sure must be her father.

The bride-to-be moons through songs with her two best girlfriends. Mom and her two girlfriends vamp down memory lane. And the three would-be dads meet and bond and sing and try to figure out why they've been summoned to sunny Greece, where each enjoyed a lovely tryst with Donna (Streep).

First-time feature director Phyllida Lloyd takes the idyllic setting, the A-list cast and the effervescent songs and tries not to muck it up, with mixed results. The staging is often pedestrian, the acting, ham-on-wry. But try to keep from grinning. Hating on ABBA is like kicking a kitten. You can't do it.

Things begin dully as Sophie croons a couple of songs. Then Mom realizes three ex-beaus have shown up at her tiny Greek hotel (she doesn't know why) and Streep launches into the title tune. The middle-aged mom is transformed into her giddy, disco-age self, manic over juggling men whom she wanted out of her life, frantic at what this means to the wedding. "Mamma Mia!" comes to life with Mama doing "Mamma Mia."

But La Streep is upstaged by her former "back-up singers," played by Walters ("Educating Rita") and Baranski (of TV's "Cybill"). Walters was never anybody's idea of a chorine, but girlfriend, pushing 60, shakes her money maker and nails song after song, landing most of the laughs and blowing "Take a Chance on Me" right out of the Aegean.

Baranski delivers the show-stopper, "Does Your Mother Know" (in which she tosses over a much younger man), with panache and raunch.

The younger leads are pleasant enough (Dominic Cooper is the would-be groom), but it's the people with mileage on them who come to life in this "Shirley Valentine" meets "Muriel's Wedding." Skarsgard ("Good Will Hunting") is the epitome of the grizzled old seafarer-travel author, Firth a delightful British priss of a banker and Brosnan properly dashing (and paunchy) as one guy who never recovered from Donna's charms. And Streep makes every scene, every song she's in, pay off, tepid directing be damned.

Old fashioned? Yes? On a par with "Hairspray" or even "Across the Universe"? No. But if you're old enough to remember the songs, "Mamma Mia!" is your "Waterloo," as in "How could I ever refuse? I feel like I win when I lose."