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Mamma Mia! [2008 film] (2008)

by Phyllida Lloyd (Director), Benny Andersson (Composer), Catherine Johnson (Screenwriter), Björn Ulvaeus (Composer)

Other authors: Christine Baranski (Actor), Pierce Brosnan (Actor), Dominic Cooper (Actor), Judy Craymer (Producer), Colin Firth (Actor)5 more, Gary Goetzman (Producer), Amanda Seyfried (Actor), Stellan Skarsgård (Actor), Meryl Streep (Actor), Julie Walters (Actor)

Series: Mamma Mia! (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
802927,640 (3.95)7
Mariposa is a butterfly fairy who loves to read and dream about what its like outside her world of Flutterfield. When the Queen that protects her land is poisoned, it's up to Mariposa and her friends to journey outside to find a hidden antidote.
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» See also 7 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
Musical
  BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
An excellent light-hearted and enjoyable musical, based around a series of Abba songs. Amanda Seyfried is excellent as 20-year-old Sophie, and Meryl Streep entirely believable as her mother, despite being almost 60 when she danced and sang as if twenty years younger.

Clever choreography, great singing (for the most part) done by the cast beforehand, and a lovely setting on a Greek island. The theme isn't really suitable for children despite the PG rating (int he UK), but there's nothing explicit and no violence.

Definitely recommended, even if you're not a fan of musicals. The extras are very interesting too.

Longer review here: https://suesdvdreviews.blogspot.com/2011/04/film-review-mamma-mia-starring-meryl... ( )
  SueinCyprus | Apr 14, 2021 |
A woman invites men who might be her father to her wedding.

1.5/4 (Meh).

I can kind of see how this might make sense as a stage musical, for people who just want to see a show of songs they know. As a movie, I can't imagine how it could possibly have worked. It's a great cast, though, and they seem to be having fun.

(Apr. 2021) ( )
  comfypants | Apr 11, 2021 |
Actually, I saw a stage production not this video, but am assuming the video is faithful to the original and has reasonably good production values.
I do wonder if the named actors did any of the singing in the video; music fans will know.
I thought the story was fun and working toward a worthwhile message, but it cratered in the finale. ( )
  librisissimo | Jan 19, 2014 |
Is it unmasculine to admit as a man that you like the pop music of Abba? Why is it that a woman can unapologetically, without the scantest blossoming of a blush, announce her fondness for Abba, or for the pop-light likes of The Carpenters, Barry Manilow, Coldplay, and not be demeaned as a "wuss" for her soft rock fandom? What kind of rank reverse sexism is that? If a man is a "wuss" for admitting his enjoyment of Abba or the Bee Gees or whomever, then should not an Abba-loving woman likewise be labelled a "wuss"? Why the double standard? And what is a "wuss" anyway? What delineates a "wusses" pejorative definitional parameters? And does one become a "wuss" when they first admit their appreciation of Abba, or when they first come to the self-realization that they enjoy the music of Abba? Is a man anymore manly and less "wussy" if he instinctively prefers AC/DC to Abba? Black Sabbath to, say, Bread? Judas Priest to the Jonas Brothers?

I'm not sure.

These are simply some serious philosophical inquiries that can flash without warning, like existential neon signs, through a man's mind instantly, when his otherwise wonderful wife basically (ab)uses her persuasive charms and coerces him one Saturday evening after the kids have fallen asleep into watching "Mamma Mia!" under the alluring pretext that if said husband obliges his wife's 'Please, pretty please!' request, that he will be "richly rewarded later". Note that the "richly rewarded later" will be spoken by the wife with a sultry wink and subtle pout of robust red lips. Therefore, said husband would be a fool, right, not to watch "Mammia Mia!" with his arm wrapped snug around his sweet, adorable, snuggly-wuggly wife's shoulders, viewing the two-hour long chick-flick-experience as, if nothing else, a good healthy psychological exercise in "delayed gratification," and/or "impulse control". Restraint.

Don't fall for it, Guys! The only problem with this sexy fantastical scenario probably ripped straight out of some half-baked porn reel is that because the kids didn't get to sleep until 11:30pm, the wife knows damn well that the husband will be snoring within half-an-hour of "Mamma Mia's!" Dancing Queen commencement (that's a comfy couch they've got, after all) and that the wily wife, upon seeing the all-too-soon (for her) ending credits, will ever so delicately (sneakily) extract herself from beneath the slumbering (possibly slobbering) solid mass of duped manhood snoring on the couch and, with an "aw shucks, he's asleep, and yet I was so in the mood, darn" nod of the head, saunter off to the bedroom with her book. How convenient. And how, tell me how, could that husband have fallen for such a ruse!?

Remember, Fellas, wives (and girlfriends and other significant-others too) are often very crafty when it comes to getting their man to watch with them a chick-flick-musical featuring the '70s pop music sensation, Abba, so don't ever fall for their you'll-be-"richly-rewarded-after-we-watch-the-movie"-routine; no! I say, NO!, may it never be; instead, always insist that the "rich rewards" come first, never later, and then, and only then, comes the "Mamma Mia!" That's some Marriage 101 pro bono counseling for you younger dudes out there.

What's that? Am I going to review Mamma Mia? Well, excuse me, I thought I just did! And how the hell, anyway, am I supposed to review "Mamma Mia!" when it made me fall asleep, didn't get me laid, did Nothing (capital "N") for me, in fact, except cause me untold bitterness, heartache, and pain!? Oh Mamma Mia! indeed! ( )
6 vote absurdeist | Mar 27, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Lloyd, PhyllidaDirectorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Andersson, BennyComposermain authorall editionsconfirmed
Johnson, CatherineScreenwritermain authorall editionsconfirmed
Ulvaeus, BjörnComposermain authorall editionsconfirmed
Baranski, ChristineActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Brosnan, PierceActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Cooper, DominicActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Craymer, JudyProducersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Firth, ColinActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Goetzman, GaryProducersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Seyfried, AmandaActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Skarsgård, StellanActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Streep, MerylActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Walters, JulieActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Rosie: Typical isn't it? You wait 20 years for a dad and then three come along at once.
Sophie: [reading Donna's diary] "We danced on the beach, and we kissed on the beach, and... dot, dot, dot."
Donna: I've done a great job with Soph all by myself, and I won't be muscled out by an ejaculation!
Rosie: I'm a lone wolf!
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This is the 2008 film.
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Mariposa is a butterfly fairy who loves to read and dream about what its like outside her world of Flutterfield. When the Queen that protects her land is poisoned, it's up to Mariposa and her friends to journey outside to find a hidden antidote.

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