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    Nanny Movie Magic

    Saving Mr. Banks is a spoonful of Mary Poppins movie fun

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 20, 2013 | 8:59 am
    Saving Mr. Banks is a spoonful of Mary Poppins movie fun
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    Movies about making movies, especially ones based on real-life stories, will always be catnip for film lovers, as they purport to take us behind the curtains and show what really happens during the filmmaking process.

    The latest example is Saving Mr. Banks, which chronicles the collaboration between Walt Disney and author P.L. Travers to adapt Travers’ novel, Mary Poppins. Travers (Emma Thompson) was notoriously reluctant to have her book adapted into a movie, especially by Disney (Tom Hanks), who, of course, was known more for making cartoons than anything else.

    It’s fascinating to discover how songs like “Feed the Birds,” “A Spoonful of Sugar” and “Let’s Go Fly a Kite” came to be.

    After 20 years of entreaties, Travers finally agreed to travel to Los Angeles in 1961 to meet with Disney, screenwriter Don DaGradi (Bradley Whitford), and composers Robert and Richard Sherman (B.J. Novak and Jason Schwartzman) to see if they could agree on a proper adaptation.

    Director John Lee Hancock (The Blind Side) intersperses that story with scenes from Travers’ childhood in Australia, where she shared a close relationship with her unreliable and alcoholic father (Colin Farrell). The movie takes great pains to show how her upbringing would come to influence both Travers’ demeanor and her writing.

    This splitting time between stories, however, does little to enhance the enjoyment of the film. The objections Travers raises to virtually every element dreamed up by Disney and his cohorts are what make the film interesting. Every time the story digresses into her childhood, it loses steam.

    That’s mostly because it’s fascinating to discover how songs like “Feed the Birds,” “A Spoonful of Sugar” and “Let’s Go Fly a Kite” came to be — especially due to Travers’ prickliness. Farrell makes the most of his performance, but nothing he does can compare to the Disney scenes.

    Thompson plays Travers just right, making her irritable but not so off-putting that she’s not relatable. Hanks is probably the perfect actor to play Disney, as his natural openness and friendliness play right into the persona for which Disney was known.

    Saving Mr. Banks doesn’t break any new ground, but it’s a greatly enjoyable look at the making of one of Disney’s best-known movies. The fact that it’s basically a feature-length commercial for the 50th anniversary edition of Mary Poppins doesn’t diminish its pleasures in the slightest.

    B.J. Novak and Jason Schwartzman in Saving Mr. Banks.

    B.J. Novak and Jason Schwartzman in Saving Mr. Banks
    Photo courtesy of Walt Disney Pictures
    B.J. Novak and Jason Schwartzman in Saving Mr. Banks.
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    One Hot Ticket

    Dallas Mavericks cash in among most expensive tickets in NBA right now

    John Egan
    Jan 6, 2026 | 12:05 pm
    Dallas Mavericks v Los Angeles Lakers
    Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images
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    With a losing record of 13-23 as of Monday, January 5, the Dallas Mavericks probably aren’t the hottest ticket in town. Nonetheless, a ticket to a Mavs game at the American Airlines Center fetches one of the highest prices in the NBA right now.

    Based on data from ticket broker SeatGeek, online betting platform eSportstars.io ranks a Mavs ticket as the fifth most expensive in the NBA, with an average price of $215. Ahead of the Mavs are the Los Angeles Lakers ($365.75), Golden State Warriors ($279.47), Boston Celtics ($247.96), and New York Knicks ($238.49).

    In the past couple of years, Mavs fans have witnessed two significant on-the-court and off-the-court changes that could have affected ticket prices.

    Last February, the Mavs traded point guard and shooting guard Luka Dončić to the Lakers as part of a three-team deal. Dončić now plays under a three-year, $165 million contract whose value could balloon to a record-setting $417 million in 2028. Five years ago, Dončić signed a five-year, $207 million contract with the Mavs.

    In 2024, a year before the Dončić trade, Dallas billionaire Mark Cuban sold a majority stake in the Mavs to the family of Las Vegas casino billionaire Miriam Adelson for about $3.5 billion. He retained a 27 percent minority stake along with control of basketball operations.

    Months afterward, Cuban revealed the primary reason for selling the $3.5 billion stake.

    “Running a professional sports team isn’t always good,” Cuban said. “When you’re winning, it’s great. When you’re going to the finals, everybody loves you. But when you’re having a bad season — you see the hate on social media. I just don’t want [my three children] to put up with that abuse.”

    Although both events were momentous, Dončić’s exit from the Mavs and Cuban’s sale of a majority stake apparently haven’t had a big impact on the team’s lofty ticket prices.

    In fact, according to eSportstars.io, it’s cheaper to see Texas’ two other NBA teams — the San Antonio Spurs and Houston Rockets — in action than the Mavs. The average ticket to a Spurs game costs $141, putting it in 12th place among NBA teams. The Rockets sit at No. 23, with an average ticket price of $95.50. So far this season, the Spurs and Rockets enjoy winning records.

    Just north of Texas, the Oklahoma City Thunder boasted the best NBA record (30-6) as of Monday, January 5. The average ticket to a Thunder game goes for $137, sandwiching it between the Spurs and Rockets.

    While a Mavs ticket might be the most expensive among Texas’ three NBA teams, the Dallas franchise isn’t the state’s most valuable. That honor goes to the Rockets, whose value stood at $5.9 billion in 2025, making it the league’s seventh most valuable NBA franchise, according to Forbes.

    The Mavs landed at No. 13, with a value of $5.1 billion, and the Spurs ranked 19th, with a value of $4.4 billion. The NBA’s most valuable team? The Golden State Warriors, at $11 billion.

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