good material thanks
syrup augmentin duo George Banks, the father figure in "Mary Poppins," is just one of the many things being saved in "Saving Mr. Banks." The Disney film adaptation of the book – after 20 years of being thwarted by its protective author P.L. Travers (Emma Thompson) – is another, and with it, the promise Walt Disney (Tom Hanks) made to his daughters to make the movie. But the main focus of all the salvation is on Mrs. Travers herself, who must overcome long-held guilt wrought by her troubled childhood, which is causing her to hold on to her precious literary creation ever so tightly. The well-acted if predictable "Saving Mr. Banks" is a crowd pleaser, presenting the tug-of-war behind the making of the 1964 Disney classic in an amusing, hilarious and ultimately heartfelt fashion. But – especially given the studio behind this presentation of its own history – it still feels like it's playing in all the fantasy of a Disney theme park.