Mamma Mia- Here We Go Again

Mamma Mia- Here We Go Again -

You hate ABBA, you despise deus ex machina plot devices, or you have a low tolerance for Pierce Brosnan’s singing voice.

Whereas the first film sometimes hammered songs into the plot like a square peg, Here We Go Again lets the music breathe. The standout sequence is the French château scene set to “Waterloo.” It is a glorious, absurd, perfectly choreographed farce involving waiters, flying champagne, and a confused fire alarm. It is pure joy. Mamma Mia- Here We Go Again

In the past (1976), we meet a 22-year-old Donna (Lily James) as she graduates Oxford and embarks on a backpacking trip across Europe. We watch her stumble, literally and figuratively, into the arms of the three men who will become Sophie’s potential fathers: the earnest Harry (Hugh Skinner), the brooding Bill (Josh Dylan), and the dreamy Sam (Jeremy Irvine). You hate ABBA, you despise deus ex machina

Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again is a mess, but it is a beautiful, intentional mess. It is too long, the present-day plot is undercooked, and it relies heavily on your tolerance for schmaltz. But when it works—specifically during Lily James’s sun-drenched odyssey and the final tear-jerking tribute—it works better than any jukebox musical has a right to. It is pure joy