Frem Here To Awesome Festival
Advertisement

Baby Boom
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $10.59
trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Charles Shyer.
Management consultant Diane Keaton has no time in her life for anything except her high-profile job. All this changes when she inherits a 14-month-old infant from a pair of recently deceased-and very distant-relatives. Intending to put the child up for adoption, she discovers that she has grown fond of the kid and has begun to thrive on the responsibilities of motherhood. All of this, of course, jeopardizes Keaton's love life and professional standing, but all turns out well when the baby inadvertently leads to a whole new moneymaking agenda for our heroine. Capraesque in concept, Baby Boom avoids phony sentiment and obvious humor, emerging as one of the singular comic delights of the late 1980s. On great bit has Keaton "celebrating" a major business coup by surreptiously performing an under-the-table jig (a bit of business that dates back to the 1924 Reginald Denny comedy Skinner's Dress Suit). Baby Boom was spun off into a TV sitcom in 1989, with Kate Jackson filling Diane Keaton's designer shoes. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Sex, Women, Movies and Shovels: ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I’ve got an unlikely double feature planed for today–a press screening of the Leonardo DiCaprio-narrated environmental doc The 11th Hour, followed by a special screening of Pasolini’s Teorema at BAM–and it’ll keep me away from the computer for most of the afternoon. So here’s a round of things you really should read before checking out for the weekend: “I don’t like movies in which a strong, confident woman learns (often through humiliation) that her life simply isn’t going to be fulfilling until she finds herself a man and maybe a child or two. I don’t care if it’s Bette Davis in Now, Voyager or Diane Keaton in Baby Boom, it’s insulting to single women, and I was a single woman for long enough that I still feel insulted.” That’s the cold open to Jette Kernion’s No Reservations review at Cinematical. The Reeler’s Annaliese Griffin notes that this year’s lineup for Scanners, the annual video festival which opens tonight at Lincoln Center, “grapples with our sex obsession in surpris ... " [More]
 



Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
are neutral about it.
most people
Most people
lost interest.

Other opinions

dragoncita13
dragoncita13
loved it.
lisasussman
lisasussman
loved it.
fallengel
fallengel
loved it.
hughlauriesgirl
hughlauriesgirl
is not interested.
estefanos
estefanos
is not interested.
esophagusnow
esophagusnow
is not interested.