whitewords whitewords whitewords LeVeque Tower
Home | About WCBE | Arts | Corporate Support | Events | Listener Support | NewsRoom | Program Guide
Search Arts
 WCBE Features
 Services

Movie Reviews
Baby Mamma



Baby Mamma
Funny and Serious

Grade: B
Director: Michael McCullers
Screenplay: McCullers (Austin Powers)
Cast: Tina Fey (Mean Girls), Amy Poehler (Wild Girls Gone)
Rating: PG-13

by John DeSando, WCBE’s It’s Movie Time

"They're borrowing one tiny little egg and some space." Donna Regan, surrogate mother



When a woman is 37, generating a baby before the alarm goes off is no laughing matter. Yet first-time helmer Michael McCullers makes an amusing, sometimes poignant rom-com out of not-quite-Judd-Apatow (Knocked Up) wit, but spot on one-liners about the insane race. (Kate Holbrook: What you eat, the baby eats. What you listen to, the baby listens to. Oscar: If you listen to DMX, the baby comes out goin' "Ennngghhh!")

The film is helped by some fine performances, notably Tina Fey's understated, distraught exec, Kate; Amy Poehler's wired, white-trash surrogate, Angie; and Steve Martin's New-Age entrepreneur, Barry, reminding me of how intelligently Martin can spoof anyone, even himself. But it's the script that rules, taking even the interesting mid-life-crises comedies of the last few years (40 year Old Virgin comes immediately to mind) to a new level of un-hyped reflections about parenting and careers, love and lust, among others.

Kate's meteoric rise in Barry's Whole-Foods-like company is never savaged for leaving her late to the baby business; it is rather a trade-off treated as reasonable that now must be factored in the decision to have a baby before 40 or whenever.

Even fertility, or its enhancement, gets its comeuppance with Sigourney Weaver's smarmy, smug surrogate agency head (remember her Katherine in Working Girl). In other words, while the odd-couple cliché of Kate and Angie, polar opposites, living together is unabashedly mined, the SNL and 30 Rock insights are in tact, flat at times, but overall bright commentary on a complicated contemporary situation that is both serious and funny.

The ending is the only authentic failure of the film—it's unimaginative writing is married to a Hollywood-enforced good feeling out of synch with the untidy enterprise of surrogate mothering and romantic fulfilling. In other words, because the ending is too pat and unbelievable, a surrogate writer should have been commissioned.


email article

print article

rss feed

tag this article


May 17, 2008
email this story to a friend
 From WCBE
 Arts Headlines
 On TV
bucket linkAustin City Limits
R.E.M.
Nature
Washington Week
Antiques Roadshow
This Old House Hour
NOW
Frontline
 On Radio
Putumayo World Music Hour
World Cafe
(Monday - Thursday at 9pm)
News & Notes
(Monday - Thursday at 7pm)
Marketplace
(Weekdays at 6:30pm)
Fresh Air
(Weekdays at 3pm)
All Things Considered
(Monday - Friday at 4pm)
Morning Edition
(Weekdays 5 - 9am)
This American Life
Car Talk Puzzler
(Saturday at 10am)
BBC The Ticket
BBC The Word
Global Hit
Geo Quiz
Riverwalk Jazz
Sounds Eclectic
Etown
Echoes
(Monday - Thursday at 10pm)
Whad'Ya Know?
(Saturday at 11am )
To The Best Of Our Knowledge
Fair Game
(Monday - Thursday at 8pm)

© 2008 WCBE  |  Contact Us |  EEO Report |  Home |  Privacy |  Sitemap
Web Hosting provided by Iwaynet | Internet Security provided by Owl River