‘Baby Mama’ cushions the rough edges
Caustic wit of Tina Fey and Amy Poehler gets defanged in this tame comedy
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Tina Fey April 24: With her new movie “Baby Mama,” her award-winning comedy series “30 Rock” and a real-life baby of her own, Tina Fey has a lot going on. Today Show Entertainment |
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Fey portrays a similar character in the new big-screen comedy “Baby Mama,” a vice-president of a Whole Foods–ish organic grocery chain who has given up on the husband-first-then-a-baby paradigm.
Fey’s Kate Holbrook, alas, suffers from a T-shaped uterus (mom Holland Taylor was apparently taking anti–liver spots medication while pregnant) which makes conception exceedingly unlikely. After getting put on a five-year waiting list for adoption, Kate decides to hire a surrogate through an agency run by corporate tiger and menopausal mother Chaffee Bicknell (a slyly hilarious Sigourney Weaver).
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“Baby Mama” keeps the laughs coming, mainly from the horror that Kate and Angie experience over the other’s excesses, but also through amusingly eccentric supporting characters like Steve Martin as Kate’s kajillionaire tree-hugger boss and Greg Kinnear’s independent smoothie maker with a hatred for Jamba Juice.
Even when the movie gets bogged down in plot — Angie fakes being pregnant, but then it turns out that she is, but the baby may actually be Carl’s — the zingers keep coming and the characters maintain a sense of being both cartoony and realistic.
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In the same way that a polished, articulate adult will be reduced to a puddle of “oogy-woogy-noogy” in the presence of an infant, “Baby Mama” chucks any subversive quality it might have had in exchange for learning, personal growth, and a sappy happy ending that’s smothered in hugs and Huggies.
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