This is a film built for pure, unadulterated fun, and 'Baby's Day Out' largely succeeds in its aim. The performances are solid, with Joe Mantegna and Lara Flynn Boyle embodying the anxious but loving parents, while Joe Pantoliano…
Baby’s Day Out
Baby Bink couldn't ask for more: he has adoring (if somewhat sickly-sweet) parents, lives in a huge mansion, and he's just about to appear in the social pages…
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'Baby's Day Out' is a film that lives and dies by its central gimmick, and sadly, the gimmick wears thin. The story of a baby outsmarting a trio of kidnappers (played with varying degrees of success by Joe…
There's an undeniable charm to the sheer audacity of 'Baby's Day Out'. The film's genius lies in its unwavering commitment to its central premise: a baby smarter than his captors. Joe Pantoliano and Brian Haley are perfectly cast…
One approaches 'Baby's Day Out' expecting a certain level of juvenile humour, and the film delivers that in spades. The performances from the adult cast, including Cynthia Nixon, feel somewhat overshadowed by the central conceit of a baby…
In 'Baby's Day Out', director (name unknown) orchestrates a delightful, albeit predictable, chase through the urban jungle. The premise is simple: a pampered infant is nabbed by a trio of dimwitted crooks, only to outsmart them at every…
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The trio of kidnappers in 'Baby's Day Out' are comically outmatched. Their attempts to control or even keep track of Baby Bink are consistently thwarted by his own cleverness and the unpredictable nature of his excursions. They are depicted as bumbling and ineffectual, serving as the primary source of the film's comedic conflict as their grand plan devolves into a desperate, and usually fruitless, pursuit.