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She's Having a Baby
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Directed by John Hughes.
An aspiring writer faces up to the responsibilities of marriage and family in this romantic comedy from writer, director, and producer John Hughes. Despite the misgivings he pours out to best friend Davis McDonald (Alec Baldwin), Jake Briggs (Kevin Bacon) marries high-school sweetheart Kristy (Elizabeth McGovern). After an abortive attempt at graduate school in New Mexico, the couple settle in suburban Chicago. Jake fakes his way into a job as an advertising copywriter, while Kristy settles into her own corporate job. The couple face the typical ups and downs of any new marriage, especially after Davis visits with a bimbo on his arm, regaling his pal Jake with tales of the good life. A few years later, Kristy decides to stop taking her birth-control pills -- and tells Jake about it three months later. Plagued by doubts, unfulfilled ambitions, and images of a fantasy girl (Isabel Lorca) he once spotted in a club, Jake resists the idea of fatherhood. Then he finds out he has low sperm count and, his manhood thus challenged, lines up for fertility clinic-assisted stud duty. The birth doesn't go as smoothly as Jake expected, however, setting the stage for climactic realizations. Edie McClurg, who played the nosy school secretary in Hughes' Ferris Bueller's Day Off, makes a cameo appearance as an officious neighbor. In addition, a who's who of other Hughes alums and Hollywood stars lend their faces and voices to a series of closing-credits shots in which each suggests a name for the titular baby. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Sweet but preachy, this John Hughes suburban yuppie fable tells a familiar story in the director's typical Chicago locale. Fantasy sequences, musical numbers, and sight gags, however, keep the material from seeming too frayed at the edges. Elizabeth McGovern gives a typically tart treatment to a role that's a little more mainstream than much of her output, while Kevin Bacon makes a likable enough everyman as the new husband and expectant father struggling to make peace with his vanishing youth. Fans of edgier material probably won't flock to this sort of picture, but the film's intended audience -- relatively well-adjusted middle-class husbands and wives -- will find a lot to like in the sweet-and-sour treatment of family angst, romantic discontentment, and workday-grind blues. The film's most effective sequence, however, owes more to its soundtrack accompaniment than to its actual content; British singer/songwriter Kate Bush crafted the resonant piano ballad "This Woman's Work" specifically for the film's climax, in which Bacon's character must wait in the maternity ward wings while his wife suffers through a difficult breach birth. The obligatory tacked-on happy ending seems like a letdown after such a powerful piece of music has lent its emotional power to the lightweight material. This is, after all, a reassuring John Hughes movie, choice soundtrack contributions notwithstanding. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 



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