Baby Review
By Christopher Null
Set on a bleak and remote island somewhere in the northeast, Baby's setting serves as an apt stand-in for its characters and its theme. Lily Malone is haunted by the recent death of her infant son and shuns the world around her. The 12-year old Larkin (Alison Pill) sees the basket baby as a shoddy replacement for her dead brother, hiding the letters the absent mother sends, letting the family know she's still alive and coming back. Grandma Byrd (Jean Stapleton) is old and dying. The power goes out a lot. And John does a fair bit of tap dancing. In other words, it's all very depressing.
Ultimately, Baby probably has a lot more to say than can be crammed into 90 minutes, and what's left on screen has been done before, time and time again. It's an admirable effort and scrubbing the Hallmarkitis out of the subject matter, but the haphazard, meandering -- and ultimately, surprisingly hollow -- tale won't have you running back for the "encore" presentations.
Walking babies.
Facts and Figures
Year: 2000
Run time: 132 mins
In Theaters: Friday 28th January 2005
Box Office USA: $100.4M
Distributed by: Warner Bros. Pictures
Production compaines: Turner Network Television, Sarabande Productions
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 2.5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 91%
Fresh: 212 Rotten: 22
IMDB: 8.1 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Robert Allan Ackerman
Producer: Cyrus I. Yavneh
Screenwriter: David Manson, Kerry Kennedy, Patricia MacLachlan
Starring: Farrah Fawcett as Lily Malone, Keith Carradine as John Malone, Jean Stapleton as Byrd, Alison Pill as Larkin Malone, Vincent Berry as Lalo Baldetti, Ann Dowd as Ms. Minifred, Sebastian Roché as Rebel Clark, Paula Malcomson as Julia, Kyra Harper as Marvella Baldelli, Glenn Close as Adult Sophie (voice)
Also starring: David Manson, Kerry Kennedy, Patricia MacLachlan