Behind the ruthlessness you see is full of affection

Janelle 2022-04-19 09:01:50

"Winds in east
Mist coming in
Like something is brewing
about to begin
...... But I feel it's to happen ,
or happend
before" Miss Travers, an old single woman who is very critical and difficult to deal with in the eyes of outsiders. Yes, in spite of her age, loneliness, and wrinkled skin, she looks delicate and moves neatly. We can't help admiring the first time we meet such an airy woman, but no one can get along well with her. You see, she has an indifferent and almost crazy paranoia about life. Said she was indifferent, oh, on the plane, the woman holding the pink baby kindly gave her the luggage space for her, but she had a headache and bluntly asked if the baby would get in the way or not. When I arrived at the hotel, I mercilessly stuffed the room full of Disney dolls into the closet. I don't like greasy sweets, and I do everything with arrogance. It is only natural to be indifferent to the disability of a colleague. Said she was paranoid and had to be called Miss Travers, otherwise it would be corrected again and again. Mary Poppins, who has been eyeing Mr. Disney for nearly 20 years, also held tightly in her hands. Even a trip to Disney was really reluctant to go because of lack of funds. As for how she actually got there, oh, it's just that, the spears and the cannons are constantly scolding everyone. so horrible. I believe that everyone who sees this ruthless woman who is particularly stubborn towards movie characters will find it difficult to connect with the gentle and capable fairy Mary in the fairy tale. So the people around them racked their brains to please her, trying to convince her and impress her. However, she still felt that everything was bad, and she was still fighting her way.
















It is difficult for anyone to endure such an extremely harsh gesture for the copyright in her hands.
Like a strange witch, she can't be happy all the time.

Fortunately, we, as the audience, didn't just see her mysterious and inhumane surface, and we didn't have to be forced to look at Miss Travers' back from the window like Mr. Walter, and asked the female secretary what women were thinking.

We see another girl, Gindy. She is young, her eyes are clear, and her love is whimsical. She has an equally fanciful father, Banks, who tells her that the horse named Albert was actually transformed by her poor uncle, and he takes the girl to experience the feeling of flying on the horse. My father was in the bank, arguing fiercely with people about something. Almost got fired, so drinking and talking like an adult, telling her that this world is just a fantasy, and that we'll never be beaten by them for as long as we remember, this bloody world. Money, money, money...

She woke up from her dream and carried Mickey Mouse back to her bedside.

Gindy has a father who loves her very, very much, trying to protect Gindy's fantasies and innocence, maybe she could have had a carefree childhood. It's a pity that Banks always yearns for freedom and can't fulfill his duties. He drank heavily, and his body began to go ill. Before the bed, Gindy could not forget the first time her father said that the poems she had written for him were not good. You should know the love that children go to great lengths to put into action in order to gain the approval of their loved ones. But Mrs. Banks, who takes care of the three children and manages the housework, can't bear the endless poverty, her husband who is sick in bed after drinking and losing her temper, the dilapidated farmhouse in the country... A drowning mother. This is what a child has endured.

It turned out that Ms. Travers refused so generously because of her mistrust. She insists that a work that has become a family member will be turned into a mess by Disney, where money and fun are paramount. Dear Mr. Banks will also be a ruthless man, and the children will be rescued by fairies, blinded by beautiful fantasy and blind to the reality of pain. She feared that Mary Lambert would be reduced to a tiny part of the Disney kingdom, and that in her own hands, everything would be unique.

So she modeled herself like an aunt who fell from the sky when she was a child, shrewd and capable, and restored the dilapidated home buried by dust to a spotless state. She can handle everything, just like the fairy Mary. It may not be a bad thing to appear ruthlessly lonely because of its peculiarities.

Later, we found out that she doesn't shy away from riding the merry-go-round, and dances lightly when the composer and screenwriter bring the story to a different ending.
When parting, sign autographs for Rauf's daughter, a disabled girl who loves to read her story, and leave a list of people who have experienced hardships and succeeded on the paper, telling Rauf that Jane can also do anything.

More importantly, what people had always thought of as Ms. Travers Gough was actually her father's name as a pseudonym. Her own name is Helen Gough.
The name of the father becomes the author, and the life of the father becomes the story.
So the father, a man who yearned for freedom all his life but was impoverished, a man who loved his daughter deeply, received Helen's deepest repentance.
She was always worried about the pears she bought for two pence, because she was excited to buy pears at her father's request, but when she came back, she didn't see that look again.

Behind the utter ruthlessness you see is utterly affectionate.

As if back in childhood, my father had promised never to leave him. The two were frolicking on the lawn, and his voice sounded again, a poem about the past,
"But I feel it's to happen ,or happend
before"

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Extended Reading

Saving Mr. Banks quotes

  • Walt Disney: I think life disappoints you, Ms. Travers. I think it's done that a lot. And maybe Mary Poppins is the only person in your life who hasn't.

    P.L. Travers: Mary Poppins isn't real.

    Walt Disney: That's not true. She was as real as can be to my daughters, and to thousands of other children - adults too. She's been a nighttime comfort to a heck of a lot of people.

    P.L. Travers: Then where is she when I need her? I open the door for Mary Poppins, and who should be standing there but Walt Disney!

  • Travers Goff: [the Travers have just arrived at their new home which is a rundown farm and it is obvious the family are in poverty but Goff tries to pretend otherwise] A Palace! Complete with mighty steed!

    Ginty: And chickens!

    Margaret Goff: [Shocked and disappointed] Oh my!

    Travers Goff: [to Margaret] We'll make beautiful memories here my angel

    [Pecks his wife on the cheek and she pretends to smile]

    Travers Goff: Girls, come on. In this house you get to share a room!