- Relational Wisdom | Ken Sande | Biblical Emotional Intelligence | Peacemaking | Institute Christian Conciliation | Reconciliation - https://rw360.org -

Saving Mr. Banks

Disney’s newest movie, Saving Mr. Banks, provides an excellent opportunity for discussing relational wisdom [1] and sharing the gospel of Christ.

Save Banks 2 - Copy (200x200) [2]The movie is built around the contentious relationship between Walt Disney and Pamela L. Travers, the author of the beloved book series, Mary Poppins. Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson play the leading roles with their typical brilliance.

The movie has two distinct but tightly interwoven layers.

In the main storyline, Travers locks horns with Disney and his creative team as they collaborate on writing the screenplay for the movie version of Travers’ books. As is documented by audio tapes of their actual conversations (and illustrated in this movie trailer [3]), Travers bristled over the Disney team’s whimsical depiction of Mary Poppins and their negative portrayal of Mr. Banks, the father of the two children placed in Mary Poppins’ care.

The deeper storyline is revealed through flashbacks to Travers’ childhood, which was scarred by an alcoholic father, a suicidal mother, and a stern Great Aunt (the prototype for Mary Poppins). According to Valarie Lawson, Travers’ biographer (Mary Poppins, She Wrote), all three of these individuals were far less nurturing in real life than presented in Saving Mr. Banks.

Travers’ actual relationship with her father was particularly agonizing. As a result, she was haunted throughout her life by painful memories of his drinking, temper outbursts, demotion from bank manager to clerk, and early death, which left the family destitute.

As a young girl, Travers sought to suppress her pain by re-imaging her father and inventing a fantasy life in which he was the “handsome supervisor of a sugarcane plantation.” She invented so many variations on this theme that her personal friends had no idea what her real family life had been like.

This clash between reality and fantasy set the stage for Travers’ primary battle with the Disney team. In their initial screen play, the team depicted Mr. Banks in a very negative light, which opened painful wounds for Travers. As a result, she stormed out of more than one meeting reeling in anger because the studio’s depiction of Mr. Banks forced her to realize that the fantasy image she’d constructed of her father was an illusion.

Seeing how troubled Travers was over the negative depiction of Mr. Banks (but not yet understanding his connection to her father), the Disney team softened his character and revised the ending of the movie. They wrote a new song that deeply moved Travers and enabled her to imagine both Mr. Banks and her father as having been saved from their lonely, self-destructive lives (thus the title, Saving Mr. Banks).

The movie includes another scene that may or may not be true. Having finally guessed that Travers’ turmoil is related to painful memories of her own father, Disney engages her in a tender conversation. He demonstrates empathy by sharing a story from his own childhood and then softly adds, “It’s not the children Mary Poppins comes to save … it’s the father … it’s your father.” For just a moment, these two intense individuals connect in a deeply emotional way.

I could find nothing in Travers’ biography or any other source that confirmed this exchange, so it may simply be the product of creative screenwriting. Whether it is real or fictional, however, it provides a vivid illustration of relational wisdom.

Specifically, this scene portrays a high level of other-awareness [4], of looking into the deep waters of another person’s life and connecting with them emotionally by understanding their fears and dreams (Prov. 20:5).

The scene also depicts the liberating impact of self-awareness [5]. When Travers finally understands and faces the way that memories of her childhood control her life, she has the opportunity to choose a new course of thinking and action, freeing her from the past.

You can use this scene, and many other interactions in the movie, to initiate a discussion of relational wisdom and, more importantly, to share the gospel of Christ.

To set the stage for such a conversation, invite some friends to watch the movie with you, either in a theater or when it is released as a DVD. Afterward, lead a discussion by asking a few of these types of questions:

Now, to get more personal …

These kinds of discussions can be risky and difficult, but they are often the key to clearing away the rubble of the past and building authentic and rewarding relationships. Step out in faith, for you have been saved not by an imaginary nanny but the one true God, who sent his Son to save the world.

– Ken Sande

Permission to distribute: Please feel free to download, print, or electronically share this message in its entirety for non-commercial purposes with as many people as you like.

© 2013 Ken Sande

Get this from a friend? Subscribe now [6]!

Share this post
[7] [8] [9] [10]