Parents' Guide to

Baby Mama

By S. Jhoanna Robledo, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 15+

SNL gals deliver hilarious comedy for teens+.

Movie PG-13 2008 100 minutes
Baby Mama Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 13+

Based on 7 parent reviews

age 13+

Very funny!

Entertaining!
age 14+

Absolutely hilarious film!

Love it!!! This is one of my favorite feel good movies when I need a good laugh. It's uplifting, fun and could teach someone a thing or two about babies, pregnancy and even surrogacy! I love Tina Fey and her character rocks (I'm into health foods too, so I can relate with her sometimes crazy health-food ideas). I also really liked Amy Poehler's character, she's sassy & witty with an absolutely hilarious personality. Can't forget Sigourney Weaver who's also very funny (playing a woman who's clearly passed the age of having babies - she has twins!), Steve Martin the CEO of a company Kate works for gives a refreshing performance...and last but not least my favorite Greg Kinnear! I found him very attractive in this movie! All in all, hilarious movie teens will love, adults will like (even men!). Some minor language, some kissing and a couple "dirty words" played nicely, drinking hard liquor (by a woman who's pretending to be pregnant). Highly recommended for 14 and up!!

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (7 ):
Kids say (22 ):

Fey and Poehler are a fabulous team -- so fun and funny to watch. Refreshingly un-saccharine even when they participate in the obligatory female bonding moment (playing a karaoke video game, no less), they take a good-enough plot and infuse it with their subversive though still-pleasant humor (they've been working together beautifully for years, and it shows). Fey in particular is ever more able, proving herself to be a comedic genius.

Add Greg Kinnear (more appealing than ever as Kate's from-left field love interest) and Dax Shepard (Angie's clueless-but-comical commonlaw husband) to season the mix. Then, top it off with Steve Martin as the self-aggrandizing, name-dropping, ponytailed tree-hugging CEO of Kate's company ("I am a great man, and great men do great things," he intones) and Sigourney Weaver as the blithely insensitive surrogacy-center owner -- who's compelled to boast about her own body's amazing ability to get pregnant despite being in her 50s -- and you have a winner. There's even some insight into the class wars as they play out in the organic foods-versus-junk food realm, as well as a dash of real poignancy in how much Kate craves a baby. So what if it's predictable? Bottom line: Brilliant? No. But laugh-out-loud funny? Definitely.

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