Baby Mama is a light, foreseeable comedy that ekes by on the strength of its performers

People who want to round out their movie purchases can sometimes be overcome by the sheer amount available for purchasing. Because of this, it helps to develop a directing principle to coordinate a collection prior to going out to buy DVDs. My husband just last week want to buy dvd, so they snapped up Baby Mama and Imust admit it’s as good than I thought it to wouldbe.

Most romantic couples, onscreen or otherwise, would die for the elements of interpersonal chemistry that Fey and Poehler contribute in the gyno-centric comedy Baby Mama, even though the ladies are only playing friends. Kate, a 37-year-old V.P. at an healthy foods company whose womb starts a-kickin’ each time she encounters a infant. Even though her career has prevented her from marriage and kids, she has determined that it’s time for her to get pregnant.

The Baby Mama dvd movies stars the always crazy Tina Fey. It features as well the pretty Amy Poehler and equally cool Greg Kinnear and directed by the talented Michael McCullers. The motion picture collected a decent –$60 million at the ticket booth since it’s launch April 25th.

Fey gets top billing for this film and deservedly so, but it’s Poehler who in reality finishes up supplying the most jokes. Amy Poehler’s the locomotive engine that prompts this fine comedy to surprising levels that far surpass the predictability indicated by the preview trailer. There are gags and scraps of action that give the film fits of airiness, and these tend to come not so much from the younger, eager performers as from the senior hands.

Nonetheless, Momma culture, with its capacity for smugness and solipsism, seems like a good topic for mockery, but Baby Mama approaches it with child mitts. This story of a corporate vice chairwoman and the surrogate mother she hires is so committed to convention that it runs into predictibility.

The overall consensus says though that Baby Mama is a light, foreseeable comedy that ekes by on the strength of its performers. A genuinely humorous, surprisingly bright and genuinely lovely comedy.

This entry was posted on Thursday, June 4th, 2009 at 8:30 am and is filed under Interesting. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

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