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Thread: Mamma Mia

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    Administrator Kefalonia Oracle kefallon's Avatar
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    Default Mamma Mia

    Too many tiurists
    Mamma Mia! How the feelgood movie of 2008 has ruined the Greek paradise island of Skopelos




    From a distance, everything looks just as it should. The teeny, white-washed Agios Ioannis chapel is perched 202 steps up a winding path on top of a rocky outcrop that juts into the sea. It appears windswept, isolated and beautifully peaceful.
    But close up, things aren't quite so tranquil. For starters, the concrete car park below is overflowing. Cars are backed up down the dusty lane and the nearby cafe is doing a roaring trade.
    The steps are alive with a constant stream of visitors, huffing and puffing, and singing Abba songs rather badly.
    Romantic idyll: Dominic Cooper and Amanda Seyfried embrace in the surf in a scene from the film - but are tourists ruining this unspoiled hideaway?



    And the church? Well, on closer inspection, it isn't quite up to scratch either. Indeed, something's so wrong that the moment most visitors pass through the heavy wooden doors, the singing stops and the recriminations begin.
    'It's very pretty, but it's all wrong,' says Carla Stone, 23, from Australia. 'There are no pews, and the altar's weird.'
    'It's tiny!' says Sophie Goodson, 15, from Godstone, Surrey. 'There's barely room for Meryl Streep, let alone the three dads and all the wedding guests.'
    'We've seen the film eight times and have come all the way from Warsaw especially, so this is very upsetting,' says Karl, 28. 'They must have used a film set for the inside.'
    Even the visitors' book is brimming with disappointment.
    'A very nice place, but not the church from Mamma Mia!' reads one entry.
    Oh dear. Perhaps I should explain. I am on Skopelos, the tiny Greek island once known for its scented pine trees, olives, dried white plums and peace and quiet... but now more famous as the place Mamma Mia! was filmed.
    Just in case you've been shut away in a wardrobe for the past year, Mamma Mia! The Movie is a film based on the fantastically successful West End show of the same name, and stars Meryl Streep, Piers Brosnan and Julie Walters.
    The premise is simple. A raft of Abba hits worked into a cheesy plot about a girl who tries to uncover the identity of her biological father - her mum (played by Meryl Streep) was quite a goer in her day - by secretly inviting the three candidates to her wedding on the un-spoilt fictional Greek island of Kalokairi.
    Abba magic: Hollywood's most successful musical, it's the highest-grossing film and fastest-selling DVD of all time in Britain





    It is just over a year since the film was released and, despite a steely determination that their island will 'never do a Captain Corelli' - nearby Kefalonia, where Captain Corelli's Mandolin was filmed, was mobbed in the wake of that film's release in 2001 - it's clear that life will never be quite the same again for the 4,969 Skopelites.
    The islanders' official policy has always been maximum friendliness and minimal Mamma Mia! publicity - so there are no Mamma Mia! T-shirts, postcards, fridge magnets or bus tours. There is no Hollywoodisation of the island, in fact, no tasteless tat at all.
    The only exception is the desolate Mamma Mia! bar, run by a lugubrious man called Demetri - who was Brosnan's driver during the filming - and dismissed as 'tacky' by many locals.

    Oh, and a smart signpost at each sacred stop on the Mamma Mia! trail - the church, the bay where the cast danced on the jetty, the trees where Sophie enjoyed a picnic with her three 'fathers'.
    'Skopelos is about more than Mamma Mia! - we don't want our island to change because of a film,' says mayor Hristos Vasiloudis, who is sitting in his sunny office in a pink, short-sleeved shirt and jeans.
    'We have culture, architecture, ancient history and pride. A film comes and goes, but we want our island to remain the same.'
    This all sounds impressive and, had it been any other film, he might just have got what he wanted.
    But as well as being horribly cheesy, Mamma Mia! is Hollywood's most successful musical, and the highest-grossing film and fastest-selling DVD of all time in Britain. It has also spawned millions of fans around the world - an awful lot of whom seem to be making over-excited pilgrimages to the island.
    Despite the fact Skopelos can be reached only by a choppy 50-minute ferry ride from the airport in Skiathos, visitor numbers have skyrocketed.

    Paradise invaded: Jane Fryer on the crowded beach now

    Hotels have been booked up months in advance, the bars and restaurants are buzzing and every couple of hours an enormous ferry disgorges another batch of Mamma Mia! fans on to the quayside in picturesque Skopelos town, often in full song. Until they realise it's not quite as it was on the big screen.
    'It was a bit disappointing at first,' says Diana Staveley, 40. 'In the film, they arrived at a pretty bay in a tiny boat, but we came on a giant ferry into the port and there were people everywhere.'

    While increased custom - even by Abba fans - sounds like good news, it's had a big effect on the island's much-prized tranquillity. The narrow roads are teeming with cars reversing and spinning tyres in the dust. And there's barely room left to sit down on some of the beaches.
    'We've been coming for years and this time it's different,' says Christina, 34, from Athens. 'There used to be four, maybe five, people on some of the beaches and now they're completely full. It's so busy you need to be there early to get a spot, so we don't bother.'
    And then there are the weddings... For months, fans have been flocking here to get married Mamma Mia!-style in the minuscule church on the hill - only to discover it's off limits unless you happen to be Greek Orthodox.
    Instead, they're tying the knot in the town hall, on one of the beaches or on a yacht and then diving into the clear blue water in their wedding finery.
    'There was one Swiss couple who were going to convert to Greek Orthodox and come back,' says Marion Fester, who works for Thalpos Holidays. 'Given that you'd fit only about six people in the church, it seems a bit extreme.'
    A bit? Just how silly can you get? Very, it seems, judging by the stream of fans traipsing into Marion's office to pay homage to a pair of Piers Brosnan's flip flops - 'They're only size seven, which was a bit of a surprise' - retrieved from his villa and now firmly nailed to the wall and draped in fairy lights.
    'At first, it was just a few children and women with their daughters, but two days ago there was a whole group of British tourists - all here to see the flip flops. The men looked embarrassed.'

    And does anyone try them on? 'Oh no! They're nailed down. Though we'd love him to come back and prise them off.'
    It is credit to the Skopelites' determination and lack of greed that there is still only one organised Mamma Mia! boat trip from Skopelos a week - because there must be ten times the demand.
    Competition for the 58 places on the Odyssey is feverish and, occasionally, bordering on the violent. Jonathan Stone, from London but resident in Greece for seven years, leads the trips.
    'They are unbelievably obsessed. We had one Swedish woman who'd seen the film 198 times. And she was upset when we didn't play it during the trip.'
    And music? 'The moment you put on the soundtrack, everyone starts dancing, so thank God the engine makes the CD slip so we can play it only when the boat stops. If it didn't, we'd have to listen to Abba all blooming day. They get disappointed that they can't drink in the beach bar and jump off the jetty [which were built specially for the film].

    The suitors: Colin Firth (l), Stellan Skarsgard, and Pierce Brosnan in a scene from the hit film. Tourists now come to pay homage to a pair of Brosnan's flip flops

    'I swear they expect Meryl Streep will be there waiting for them, sunning herself on a sun lounger.'
    It might sound like harmless fun, but the film has had a more worrying effect on the island. Prices have shot up in the bars, tavernas and even supermarkets. 'Taverna life is being eroded,' says Neil Durham, 64, from Bangor, but now a resident.
    'The Greeks like to spend their evenings eating and drinking together, but since Mamma Mia! food prices have gone up by 50 per cent and the locals can no longer afford to eat out.
    'Mamma Mia! is also destroying the Greek culture. Even the TV adverts have changed to cater to the tourists. These days, they're all for Danish cheese and German sausages.'
    One furious local, known for obvious reasons as 'Hairy George', has built a mock taverna in a lay-by to protest against rising bar prices.
    Development is booming, too. Property posters flutter in the wind around Skopelos, the island's first five-star hotel will be completed next summer, and building sites are being carved out of the empty land between the lemon trees and the olive groves as foreigners fight to buy a slice of the Skopelos dream.
    Prices start at about £120,000 for a traditional townhouse, and from £200,000 for a villa with sea views.
    According to local estate agents, interest has been increasing steadily since the film came out and properties are being snapped up within days of going on the market.

    'There's no faffing about - they see something and buy it. They know that if they don't, someone else will,' says one estate agent. 'There's no such thing as a recession in Skopelos.' So what do the Skopelites think about all this interest in their beautiful green island?

    There are a few commercial types who think the mayor's mad not to milk Mamma Mia! for all it's worth. Generally, however, the locals aren't interested. Particularly outside Skopelos town, where eyes roll at the mention of the film.

    The locals do, however, have fond memories of the filming. As well as spending huge amounts of money on the island - 'It was like manna from heaven,' says local restaurateur Nikos Stamatakis - the cast and crew were happy to mix with the locals.
    They shopped in the gift shops, drank in the bars, danced on the tables and had a brilliant time.
    'I had them all in here: Mrs Streep, Mr Colin Firth. Mr Brosnan was my favourite - so natural and handsome,' says Peggy, who runs a jewellery shop in Skopelos town.
    'He was in more than 12 times - my poor husband was working flat out to make all the jewellery.'
    And many locals appeared as extras. 'It was so exciting and brilliant fun,' says Sabrina, a 38-year-old travel agent, who spent three days traipsing up and down the 202 steps to the chapel in the rain.
    There were, of course, a few hiccups. The set builders upset everyone by adding a false front to the chapel, and a vicar officiated in the wedding scene instead of a Greek Orthodox priest.
    But generally, the shoot went like clockwork and the locals have nothing but praise for the stars - particularly Brosnan, who did a lot of late-night drinking with them, charmed the whole island and wrote lovely thank you notes afterwards.
    To be fair, the film company did go to enormous lengths to put everything back as it was when they arrived. It seems the only thing they couldn't do was restore the peace and quiet.
    As Nina Koukovinas, 79, puts it: 'If only they could turn the clock back to when things were more normal and people had better manners.'
    Speaking of which, back up at the chapel, things are less civil as an elderly couple from Macclesfield are shooed out of the way by an Indian woman brandishing an enormous camera.
    'Old lady - get out of the way, please! I've come from India for this picture and I don't want you in it.'
    Goodness. As the story goes, the film's producers looked at more than 25 Greek islands before plumping for Skopelos.
    'Apparently, they chose our island because it was so green and simple and peaceful,' says one local.
    Poor old Skopelos. It's still a beautiful island, but I wonder if the producers would choose it now? And if they did, whether they'd be welcomed with such open arms.



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    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle john's Avatar
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    What a load of drivel!!!!
    Yes, some of it is true, the "Mamma Mia!" bar does exist but the ferries do not disgorge hundreds of visitors daily singing songs from the film. Hotels are not booked up months in advance, there are no signs pointing to film locations and no one is attempting to cash in on the film.
    Walk around Skopelos town and you wouldn't know anything different if you had visited a few years ago!
    These writers must have been on Mars not Skopelos!

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    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle Tetris Champion
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    The article was in the Daily Mail so we can't expect the truth and balanced reporting.

    Jane Fryer might have a better figure than John, but I know who I believe
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.

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    Kefalonia Expert Cato's Avatar
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    What a relief!
    It had quite put me off ever going there, but may consider it now
    These films have a lot to answer for, hypeing places up.
    Mind you, I'm always shocked by people who pick a destination and do absolutely no research on it first, and then moan when it's not what they wanted.
    Set the controls for the heart of the sun.

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    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle Tetris Champion
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cato View Post
    What a relief!
    I'm always shocked by people who pick a destination and do absolutely no research on it first, and then moan when it's not what they wanted.
    But these people have probably done loads of research. They might have watched Mamma Mia over 50 times and know Meryl Streep's birth sign ........ and how many hairs Brosnam has on his chest. Maybe they watch *reality* TV too (Big Brother).

    This reminds me of an incident in Sami last year. We were sat on a bench looking at the Easy Jet cruise ship (I had just been over to book a crossing to Ithaka at the ferry office).

    We got in conversation with a lady who was on the Easy Cruise ship. I asked her what other ports they had docked at en route ............ she had no idea.

    I then asked where she had joined the ship ....... again no idea.

    I then asked which port they sailed from ................ again no idea.

    Which airport did you fly to ........................ again no idea.

    Which country did you fly to ....................... again no idea.

    Then came the answer that summed it all up.............. we have been going to Benidorm for over 30 years. I wish we were there now.

    Need I say any more?
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.

    George Carlin

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    We have friends who have just recently come back from Skopelos and I have showed them this article, they couldn't believe that they were reading about the same Island they have just been to on their holidays

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    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle john's Avatar
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    To go back to the clip Martin showed, someone commented on the fact that because the chapel shown in the film (the inside) wasn't as big as the one in the film it disappointed them??? It wasn't the same!! Didn't they realise that "Villa Donna" was a studio set? The sea that they saw from the ledge on Villa Donna was a painted backdrop? What planet are these people on? Films are not real for goodness sake! Ok, they will try and make the scenes authentic as possible but come on, could you imagine a film crew carrying the equipment all the way up the steps of Aghios Ioannis!!
    And to go back a bit, was anyone really devasted when they found out that Argostoli in CCM was really Sami?
    At the end of the day, it is artistic interpretation...........Simples!!
    As for the locals, i reckon they would welcome everyone connected with Mamma Mia back with open arms. Maybe there are a few more tourists on the island as a result of the film. They are bringing in good money for the local economy as a result. This will drop off again after a year or so (as did Kefalonia after CCM).
    The writer remarked on the islands roads "teeming with cars doing wheel spins!!"
    When we hired our car we made several journeys from Skopelos town up to Glossa and Loutraki at the north of the island. This is the main road of the island, and basically the only major tarmac road. We were lucky if we passed about half a dozen cars on each trip! Yes there were lots of cars at the beaches but as for nose to tail traffic, no way!
    For anyone considering visiting Skopelos, DO NOT let this article put you off! The film has had no detrimental impact on the island at all. It is EXACTLY as i remember it when i first visited it back in 2001!

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    Super Moderator Kefalonia Oracle Tetris Champion
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    We have now had reports of the *real* Skopelos from John & Jan.

    Maybe, sometimes it isn't a bad thing that Joe Punter believes what he/she reads in the tabloids, rather than doing a proper search for the facts. In this case it might keep a few people away from Greece when they probably wanted to go there for all the wrong reasons - sorry if I sound judgemental, but I am sure most of you know what I mean

    Message boards like ours provide a true opinion of everything that is good and bad about Greece. We all have our different ideas and aspirations about holidays so it is always best to read between the lines and make your own judgements accordingly.

    But, what is good for John and Jan is good for me. I still have Skopelos on my list for the future

    Phil
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.

    George Carlin

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    Quote Originally Posted by Phil View Post
    Which country did you fly to ....................... again no idea.
    There were a few of us - truly bored after waiting for delayed planes - who used to then do our welcome spiel on the coach:

    Welcome to Rhodes! You have made a fantastic choice for your holiday!

    Rarely did anyone bat an eyelid.

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    Kefalonia Oracle jed's Avatar
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    Perhaps it's just a piece of reverse publicity to discourage the oiks from going to Skopelos.

    If they think that there's nothing recognisable from the film they maybe won't bother and life will go on just the same as it ever was.

    Jed
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