Baby Mama


A Film Review By Paul Perkins



For All The Women In The World Who Wants To Have A Baby

Every Adult Women in the world dreams of having a family. Even the die hard Businness Women deep down dreams one day of raseing a family but will never admit it. For some women it will be easy to make a baby for other it will be hard and for a handful they can not have a baby. If you are one of those handful do get discourge granted i know you what to have the feeling of giving birth. But there are many adoption agency who have a lot of kid looking for a great mom like you so don't give up.

Baby Mama is the new film that centers on Successful and single businesswoman Kate Holbrook (Tina Fey) has long put her career ahead of a personal life. Now 37, she's finally determined to have a kid on her own. But her plan is thrown a curve ball after she discovers she has only a million-to-one chance of getting pregnant. Undaunted, the driven Kate allows South Philly working girl Angie Ostrowiski (Amy Poehler) to become her unlikely surrogate. Simple enough...

After learning from the steely head (Sigourney Weaver) of their surrogacy center that Angie is pregnant, Kate goes into precision nesting mode: reading childcare books, baby-proofing the apartment and researching top pre-schools. But the executive's well-organized strategy is turned upside down when her Baby Mama shows up at her doorstep with no place to live.

Baby Mama was a very cute and funny film i really like the idea of the film and the way the director tells the story. The acting was pretty good by everyone in the case. Dax Shepard played the stupid boyfriend pefectly and Tina and Amy was great together and being both of them are comics it made for some very funny screnes.

The film did not drag at all and held my attention from start to finish. I like how the comedy was not out of this world and it did not get to boring or repeats the jokes. As somethiung comedy film usally does. Overall Baby Mama is a nice comedy to check out before the big summer blockbusters comes out and dominates the summer season.

(c) 2008 Paul Perkins