The past timeline works because it’s not a comedy. It’s a romance that knows it is destined to fail. Watching young Donna fall for Sam, knowing that he eventually betrays her by returning to his fiancée, gives every sunny duet a shadow of future pain.
But the sequel’s secret weapon is the deep cuts. Moving beyond Gold , the soundtrack utilizes The Visitors and other later tracks. “When I Kissed the Teacher” becomes a raucous college graduation anthem, while “I’ve Been Waiting for You” transforms a simple dinner scene into a spiritual reunion. Mamma Mia- Here We Go Again
Fans of the original, anyone grieving a parent, and people who believe that every problem can be solved with a choreographed dance number on a Greek pier. The past timeline works because it’s not a comedy
While the past timeline soars, the present timeline stumbles. Amanda Seyfried does her best with limited material, but Sophie’s crisis—"I miss my mom and my boyfriend is in New York"—feels thin compared to Donna’s epic journey of self-discovery. The new male leads in the present (Dominic Cooper’s Sky, and Andy Garcia as a hotel manager) are given nothing to do except look handsome and concerned. But the sequel’s secret weapon is the deep cuts
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.
The film operates on two timelines. In the present (five years after the first film), Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) is preparing the grand reopening of the Hotel Bella Donna in honor of her late mother, Donna. When a storm leaves her stranded alone, she panics, questioning her relationship with Sky and her ability to live up to her mother’s legacy.