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HOLIDAYS & EVENTS



Baby Mama
Review by Frederica Mathewes-Green | posted 4/25/2008




Baby Mama

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MPAA rating: PG-13
(for crude and sexual humor, language and a drug reference)

Genre: Comedy

Theater release:
April 25, 2008
by Mama

Directed by: Michael McCullers

Runtime: 1 hour 36 minutes

Cast: Tina Fey (Kate Holbrook), Amy Poehler (Angie Ostrowiski), Greg Kinnear (Rob), Dax Shepard (Carl), Romany Malco (Oscar), Sigourney Weaver (Chaffee Bicknell), Steve Martin

Related
Talk About It/Family Corner


When Chinese food was first becoming popular in the U.S. some decades ago, a saying quickly became a cliché: it tastes great, but an hour later you're hungry all over again.

Some comedies are like that. As long as you're in the theater, you could be laughing more or less continuously. On the way home, though, the lines and images that evoked such mirth have somehow evaporated. You sift your mind for memorable moments, but apparently they weren't all that memorable. Punchlines seem less punchy. Even the performer's faces blur in retrospect.

Tina Fey as Kate, Amy Poehler as Angie
Tina Fey as Kate, Amy Poehler as Angie

That's the case with Baby Mama. I've sat through enough laugh-less comedies to be grateful when a movie entertains me, even temporarily—but no one's going to call this film a classic.

The storyline is unimaginative: Kate Holbrook (Tina Fey), a top exec at the Round Earth organic grocery chain decides that, at 37, mommy-hood is now or never. But artificial insemination isn't working, and when she applies to adopt a child she is turned down. Kate is about to give up hope when runs across a completely unexpected option: hire another woman to carry her Petri-dish baby. She visits the Chaffee Bicknell surrogacy agency and gets a persuasive sales pitch from Chaffee herself (Sigourney Weaver): "We don't do our own taxes any more, we don't program our own computers; we outsource."

So Kate meets, and then signs a contract with, an uneducated blonde named Angie Ostrowiski (Amy Poehler), and offers her $100,000 as a nine-month carrying fee. Not long afterward, Angie breaks up with her Neanderthal boyfriend, Carl, and moves into Kate's apartment—setting the stage for a female version of The Odd Couple. Though the humor often dwells on pregnancy, babies, and female body functions (a prospect likely to keep male viewers out of the theater), the mainspring of the film is the profound personality differences between Kate and Angie.

Kate attends a Lamaze class with her surrogate, Angie
Kate attends a Lamaze class with her surrogate, Angie

It's where the movie falters, I think, because those differences are so stereotyped. Kate is uptight, while Angie fast and loose; Kate's responsible, while Angie is impulsive and reckless; Kate is smart, and—not to put too fine a point on it—Angie's stupid. Kate points out that it's no sign of intelligence when a woman falls asleep with a curling iron in her hair. Angie retorts, "That only happened two times!"

The formula requires that Kate learn some lessons from Angie too, of course, but these are less successful in terms of laughs, or even in terms of logic. It's really not believable that Kate would allow Angie to dress her up for a night of "clubbing" in an outfit that shoots right past "slinky" and lands at "skanky." It's not believable that on their night out Kate keeps tossing back the drinks, as if she had no experience with alcohol. And it doesn't make sense for Kate to go on after that night accentuating her tidy, businesslike appearance with abundant cleavage.

Sigourney Weaver as Chaffee Bicknell
Sigourney Weaver as Chaffee Bicknell

The film has a good fix on how to present stupid jokes (and stupid jokes can be really, really funny), but it seems less clear on what to do with Kate. Though she lives at a level of income few of us will ever know, the story is framed so that we'll identify with her, and view Angie and Carl as appallingly crude, superficial, and sneaky. It's a bit of awkward timing that a movie trading so heavily in ridicule of blue-collar characters would debut so soon after a political dustup over charges of "elitism." (The story takes place in Pennsylvania, by the way.) It's also a bit uncomfortable that the only black character in the movie, Oscar (Romany Malco), is a doorman, and that his role consists largely of reacting to things the crazy white people do, widening his eyes so you see the whites all around. Since Oscar has the edge on Carl in so many ways—smarter, kinder, handsomer—I had an idea that he might offer Angie a romantic alternative, but this was a plot opportunity missed.




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