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Nearly every review or article about Velvet Goldmine mentions the influence of that celluloid granddaddy Citizen Kane. Todd himself has talked about the influence of those fabulous cinematic head trips of the '60s like A Clockwork Orange, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Performance. However, if one looks past the sequins, drugs, and rock & roll, Velvet Goldmine displays the far more pervasive influence of a completely different cinematic classic. From the opening pan over Dublin's rooftops, to Curt and Arthur hanging out near the chimney stacks, Velvet Goldmine has many images that pay homage to none other than Mary Poppins. While accepting the 2004 Outfest Achievement Award, Todd declared,

"My very first movie was 'Mary Poppins' when I was three, and I got stuck there for a while. I needed to respond to that experience creatively, so I started drawing Mary Poppins everywhere, then I even started putting on plays for my parents. 'Mary Poppins' maybe the singular text that defines me -- and why not?"


So here, for your viewing pleasure, Iris Out and Lux Pan present
The Mary Poppins - Velvet Goldmine Comparisons Gallery.


The caps were done by the brilliant and invaluable Iris Out, aka [livejournal.com profile] velvetspur, who deserves a case of champagne for her skills and devotion.



We're following the chronology of Mary Poppins with the Mary Poppins images to the left, and the Velvet Goldmine images to the right.

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Both films start with something magical descending from the heavens.


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Mary Poppins opens with sweeping aerial shots of London, Velvet Goldmine with a swoop over Dublin's rooftops.


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We fly over Big Ben and it appears in Maxwell's painting.


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Here's St. Paul's Cathedral and again in Maxwell's painting.


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Mary Poppins, the magical nanny, floats down from the clouds. In the books Mary Poppins 'cannot pass a window or a mirror without admiring her reflection', so naturally she loves her compact mirror. Perhaps as much as Brian does.


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Mary Poppins uses her umbrella to fly, Maxwell needs one because he came down like water for the age of solar love, or something like that.


Mary takes her charges, Jane and Michael, out for a walk and they meet her friend Bert, the Chimney sweep, who has done some chalk drawings on the sidewalk.
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Mary's shadow enters the gold baroque picture frame and it looks just like Maxwell's.


Bert has drawn several chalk pictures. He shows the children three that are also locations in Velvet Goldmine:
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At the Seashore. Brian gives Curt the pin 'on some beach'.


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At the Circus. Bijou's press soirée.


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Punting on the Thames. The morning after the outdoor concert.


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Bert looks handsome despite his sooty face. Curt is Fantasia's Satyr with Bert's chimney sweep charm and dirty face.


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In Mary Poppins, Mary, Bert and the children get to the roof of the children's house by magically flying up the chimney through the fireplace and arrive on the roof in a puff of soot. Michael arrives first, in a puff of smoke, and Curt leaves in one.


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Earlier, Mary, Bert and the children hold hands and jump on one of the chalk pictures and magically disappear into it. The magic spell necessary for the transformation is "You think, You wink, you do a double blink, you close your eyes and jump." ~ Curt winks at the audience before going down the chimney.


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Jane & Michael looking up at Mary landing on roof. Arthur and Curt see the spaceship.


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A view of the lovely world of the rooftops.


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They walk through the narrow passages on the roof.


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Michael passes some chimney stacks, as does Arthur.


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Bert meets his fellow chimney sweeps and there is a rousing dance sequence, ending with the dancers disappearing down the chimneys like Curt.


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Bert lies on the roof looking up at fireworks, Curt at a shooting star.


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Fireworks leave a shower of glitter as they pass over the roof, as does the spaceship.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-04-11 03:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] splix.livejournal.com
I just watched Mary Poppins last week and never made any of those connections. Brilliant!

(no subject)

Date: 2005-04-12 12:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vardathemessage.livejournal.com
What a difference a day makes...

Thanks!

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We are already at a point where an appeal to rock 'n' roll will tell us almost nothing worth knowing, though this is, finally, a rock 'n' roll story. Real mysteries cannot be solved, but they can be turned into better mysteries.

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