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IMDbPro

Uma Mãe para o Meu Bebê

Título original: Baby Mama
  • 2008
  • 12
  • 1 h 39 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,0/10
49 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Uma Mãe para o Meu Bebê (2008)
Baby Mama Trailer
Reproduzir trailer2:28
11 vídeos
60 fotos
ComédiaRomance

Uma empresária solteira que sonha em ter um bebê descobre que é infértil e contrata uma mulher da classe trabalhadora para substituí-la.Uma empresária solteira que sonha em ter um bebê descobre que é infértil e contrata uma mulher da classe trabalhadora para substituí-la.Uma empresária solteira que sonha em ter um bebê descobre que é infértil e contrata uma mulher da classe trabalhadora para substituí-la.

  • Direção
    • Michael McCullers
  • Roteirista
    • Michael McCullers
  • Artistas
    • Tina Fey
    • Amy Poehler
    • Sigourney Weaver
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,0/10
    49 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Michael McCullers
    • Roteirista
      • Michael McCullers
    • Artistas
      • Tina Fey
      • Amy Poehler
      • Sigourney Weaver
    • 130Avaliações de usuários
    • 149Avaliações da crítica
    • 55Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória e 5 indicações no total

    Vídeos11

    Baby Mama
    Trailer 2:28
    Baby Mama
    Baby Mama: Kate Meets With Chaffee
    Clip 0:36
    Baby Mama: Kate Meets With Chaffee
    Baby Mama: Kate Meets With Chaffee
    Clip 0:36
    Baby Mama: Kate Meets With Chaffee
    Baby Mama: Kate And Angie At The Birthing Class
    Clip 0:40
    Baby Mama: Kate And Angie At The Birthing Class
    Baby Mama: Angie And Carl Talk To Kate
    Clip 0:48
    Baby Mama: Angie And Carl Talk To Kate
    Baby Mama: Kate Tries To Get Angie To Swallow A Vitamin
    Clip 0:46
    Baby Mama: Kate Tries To Get Angie To Swallow A Vitamin
    Baby Mama: Kate Accuses Angie Of Sticking Gum Under Her Table
    Clip 0:35
    Baby Mama: Kate Accuses Angie Of Sticking Gum Under Her Table

    Fotos60

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    Elenco principal61

    Editar
    Tina Fey
    Tina Fey
    • Kate
    Amy Poehler
    Amy Poehler
    • Angie
    Sigourney Weaver
    Sigourney Weaver
    • Chaffee Bicknell
    Greg Kinnear
    Greg Kinnear
    • Rob
    Dax Shepard
    Dax Shepard
    • Carl
    Romany Malco
    Romany Malco
    • Oscar
    Steve Martin
    Steve Martin
    • Barry
    Maura Tierney
    Maura Tierney
    • Caroline
    Stephen Mailer
    Stephen Mailer
    • Dan
    Holland Taylor
    Holland Taylor
    • Rose
    James Rebhorn
    James Rebhorn
    • Judge
    Denis O'Hare
    Denis O'Hare
    • Dr. Manheim
    Kevin Collins
    • Architect…
    Will Forte
    Will Forte
    • Scott
    Fred Armisen
    Fred Armisen
    • Stroller Salesman
    John Hodgman
    John Hodgman
    • Fertility Specialist
    Siobhan Fallon Hogan
    Siobhan Fallon Hogan
    • Birthing Teacher
    Tom McCarthy
    Tom McCarthy
    • Kate's Date
    • Direção
      • Michael McCullers
    • Roteirista
      • Michael McCullers
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários130

    6,048.7K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    5TheMovieDiorama

    Baby Mama feels lighter and slightly more colourful than a used pregnancy test.

    Fey and Poehler were the 'Saturday Night Live' dream team. Consistently witty and constantly hilarious. But these results are usually produced when they are performing their own writing. McCullers, mostly of 'Austin Powers' fame, unfortunately places too many restraints on these two leads that consequently hold the overall comedy back, despite its sweet lighthearted tone. A single businesswoman, who mostly puts her career before her personal life, desires to conceive a baby but is unable to due to certain complications. She then proceeds to go down the surrogacy route and forces her lifestyle choices upon the surrogate mother.

    "I don't like your uterus, I really don't like your uterus". It's a warm tale on motherhood, executed at such a pedestrian pace that it's as if McCullers, who opted to direct this also, was imitating a baby's first steps. It's slow, mostly wobbly, but you can't help but smile at the effort put in. Fey and Poehler emit their natural chemistry once again, and it truly is infectious. The supporting cast also had a few humorous moments, especially the legend that is Weaver who only has to smile and I'm laughing hysterically. Unfortunately the material that out leads are given prevents them from showing their true comedic talents. Rarely did I snigger let alone laugh, which is a dire shame considering my adoration for the SNL dream team. McCullers approach to the idea of surrogacy was naively basic, and it's because of this that the film ultimately felt underwhelming.

    The dialogue between them surprisingly lacked personality, conforming to predictable clichéd traits for each character. It probably doesn't help that I dislike babies/infants/most small humans, so shoving a dozen of them in my face almost immediately was probably an indicator. Still, its light endeavours into surrogacy using two of my favourite comedians made for a watchable yet forgettable "comedy" that was absent of laughs. Needed Weaver to release her inner Ripley, then we have a film worth investing in!
    7evanston_dad

    A Buddy Comedy with a Healthy Dose of Estrogen

    Tina Fey and Amy Poehler prove that buddy comedies need not be the exclusive domain of naughty boys.

    "Baby Mama" is no comic masterpiece, but it's at least as good as any number of formulaic comedies churned out by Hollywood and much better than many others. Fey is the uptight career woman who hears her biological clock ticking at 37 and wants to have a baby before it's too late. Poehler is the low-class, free-wheeling blonde who agrees to be her surrogate mother for a hefty fee. The usual odd-couple conflicts ensue, maternal instincts kick in, and in traditional sitcom style, everyone gets what they want in the end.

    The movie is mostly an excuse to give Fey and Poehler the chance to riff off of one another, and they do it well. Poehler especially displays the ability to carry a movie, something most SNL veterans aren't able to do. She's funny, but she's also able to embody an actual character rather than simply do skit-T.V. schtick. Just watch her horrified face the first time she tastes water; or the hilarious scene when Fey wrestles her into the shower and begins to scrub the hair dye off of her head in a scene that spoofs "Silkwood."

    Also starring Greg Kinnear as a smoothie store owner, and a whacked out Steve Martin as Fey's new age boss.

    Grade: A-
    6EUyeshima

    Predictable Farce Driven by a Deafening Biological Clock and a Familiar "Odd Couple" Set-Up

    There is a smattering of smart laughs in this 2008 comedy, but first-time director Michael McCullers really plods his own coincidence-driven script along with little sense of style or dramatic resonance. At times, it feels no better than a formulaic romantic comedy from the 1960's usually starring small-screen celebrities trying to break into the big time. Sure enough, this time, we are offered Tina Fey (currently of NBC's "30 Rock") and Amy Poehler, former "Saturday Night Live" Weekend Update co-anchors and definitely the cream of the current funny lady crop. The problem is that McCullers, a one-time SNL staff writer who also co-wrote the Austin Powers movies with Mike Myers, doesn't elevate the screenplay much beyond the limited dimensions of an extended comedy sketch. That puts most of the pressure on the two women to make this farce work as a distaff version of "The Odd Couple" with a pregnancy angle, and they often - you should pardon the expression - deliver.

    Ideally cast with her smart, bespectacled looks, Fey plays 37-year-old Kate Holbrook, single and professionally successful as the VP of an upscale organic supermarket chain much like Whole Foods. She hears her biological clock ticking and is taking every step possible to have a baby. Her last straw is to pay an agency $100,000 to find a surrogate. Naturally, her polar opposite shows up as the ideal candidate - a junk-food-eating, Red Bull-swilling piece of white trash named Angie Ostrowski who comes with her money-drubbing boyfriend Carl. Kate is so desperate she is practically begging Angie to carry her egg, so Angie willingly accepts. Somehow, the women end up living together during the pregnancy and inevitably get on each other's nerves, more Angie on Kate's nerves since a few revelations threaten to upend the deal. Convenience appears to trump logic in tying up the plot's loose ends, of which there are many. However, McCullers' alternately sauntering and piercing Judd Apatow-like approach helps compensate for the bigger lapses.

    A game cast also helps. Although fairly limited as an actress, Fey is sharp and likable as the often dour Kate and has the ability to bring the implausibility of her character's situation into more human focus. Even though she is entirely too old for her role, Poehler is a more natural comic presence as Angie, terrifically manic but surprisingly poignant during key moments. It's obvious their joint casting has more to do with their proved rapport than dramatic credibility. In a turn worthy of Jeff Foxworthy, Dax Shepard credibly makes Carl a mercenary sheep. Romany Malco (memorable as Andy's horned-up co-worker in "The 40-Year-Old Virgin") is given little to do as the streetwise doorman, the same fate of Maura Tierney bland as Kate's supportive sister. Greg Kinnear must be getting awfully tired playing the same type of romantic foil over and over again, but he does do it well even though his scenes also seem strangely truncated. Two veterans threaten to steal the picture in acts of petty larceny - a pony-tailed Steve Martin very funny as Kate's Zen-seeking boss whose idea of a reward is allowing her to stare at him for five minutes, and Sigourney Weaver as the overtly self-satisfied and all-too-fertile head of the agency. SNL regulars Will Forte and Fred Armisen show up in cameos. A fitfully funny farce.
    6jaredmobarak

    My avatar is dressed like a whore…Baby Mama

    Say what you will about the marketing machine, but I truly think the people behind promoting Baby Mama did a bang up job…even if I believe they did so without trying. They make expectations so low in the trailer that you almost have to enjoy the film. Was it a great comedy? No. However, it was much better than I ever could have hoped as Michael McCullers takes us places you never would expect going in. I thought that it would be a water-downed, overlong SNL skit with one woman asking another to carry her baby, leading to a generic odd couple pairing with hijinks and gags piling on top of each other, collapsing under its own weight. Instead we are treated to a pretty sentimental and touching portrait of two women learning to grow and evolve with help from the other, a person, in both regards, that they never would have thought could teach them anything. Even the pregnancy aspect takes a ton of twists and turns never becoming the straight shot gimmick just bringing everyone together. The surrogate mother here must make some tough decisions as she continues along on her journey, lending a side to the tale that actually brings it to a level of intrigue that no Lorne Michaels film has done in recent memory.

    I don't want to ruin the plot points of Angie Ostrowiski's pregnancy, but let's just say it isn't cut and dry. Her motives aren't genuine, something that is obvious from the start, just not quite in the way you anticipate. There are surprises for her and secrets hidden from the other characters as she wrestles within herself. A "white-trash" loser, attached to a man that believes waiting on the phone to be the 132.7 caller is a job, Angie learns a lot while with mom-to-be Kate Holbrook. Kate, being the professional VP of an organic food market, is a very detail orientated woman who is by the books and unafraid to tell others what they should do. It is an oil and water connection, but—like all good relationships of this kind—breeds some real funny and touching moments. Who thought watching Karaoke on the Playstation could be so much fun? Sure many instances feel like skits written separately and plugged in later, (the clubbing while pregnant, the press conference ambush, and the surrogate therapy session—probably the funniest scene without question), but they are surprisingly strung together to make a pretty coherent whole.

    The other thing that the trailer hides is the inclusion of two great male roles. Did anyone know that Greg Kinnear and Steve Martin were in this thing? I for one was completely surprised by both, almost chuckling that they would have a small cameo until I realized that both were key roles to the whole. In the best turn of the film, Steve Martin is crazy, hippie genius. His earthy style of living, complete with long ponytail and soft speech, even when angered, is classic, as is everything uttered from his mouth. He is so good that I would be thrilled to have him offer me 5 uninterrupted minutes of staring into his eyes as a reward for a job well done. For Kinnear's part, he plays the usual love interest that is commonplace in films of this ilk. It's not flashy and it's not very original, but Greg is a stalwart and pulls off the good guy persona, even including a little bit of physical humor at the end.

    Overall, though, this film is pretty standard fare. It goes into very broad comedy at times and very sappy/overly-sentimental drivel at others. There are some good jokes sprinkled throughout and for the most part keep it fun for the duration. Definitely feeling longer than it is, I never quite felt bored and I did begin to get invested in the story to see how it all would turn out. A lot of that can be credited to the chemistry between Tina Fey and Amy Pohler as Kate and Angie respectively. Both these women do a great job with their roles, fleshing out the psychotic relationship to perfection. One of the successful dynamics is how Fey becomes a mother figure to her surrogate. Even going so far as having temper tantrums and rubber-faced reactions, Pohler is a child.

    It's also nice to see some fun moments from the supporting cast, but again nothing really sticks out to vault anything into must see territory. Sigourney Weaver is actually kinda scary in a very weird role; Romany Malco has plenty of great one-liners and facial expressions; and John Hodgeman is a bit odd in a small bit, with laughs coming more from the recognition of his Mac commercials than anything he does in the film. In the end, while nothing over-achieves, it all adds up to a pretty solid comedy worth a view. Is it necessary to see on the big screen? Probably not, but if you were worried that it might be a train-wreck, just know that it never takes any chances to risk derailing, and that's not a bad thing.
    9Lil_miss_tazzy

    Great Fun

    Due to my love of Tina Fey I went out of my way to see this film at the cinema; on first release it was only shown at 11-30 in the morning and I dragged my mum to watch in an empty theatre. All I can say is that it was worth the effort.

    The two leads bounce off of one another with brilliant comic timing, and both manage to make their flawed characters utterly likable. Yes, the plot is predictable, and no, there is no joke that made me fall out of my seat. However, it did deliver on many levels. The comedy was sharp and although the ending was a little contrived it did manage to put a goofy smile on the face of a cynical teenager, IE moi. 'Baby Mama' is perfect chick fare, and I am disappointed in the cinemas who have cleared all their screens in preparation for the release of 'The Dark Knight'.

    Poehler and Fey sparkled and were supported by an excellent cast; Steve Martin was odd, providing some light comedy, but it was Sigourney Weaver and Greg Kinnear (back on form and looking less haggard) whom i felt really carried the film in the absence of the two leads.

    Baby Mama was refreshing and a great indication that we should see more of these two girls on the big screen.

    4/5 Stars

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Angie has a drawer full of TASTYKAKE cupkakes. TASTYKAKE is the Philadelphia based brand that rivals Hostess and since the movie is set in Philadelphia her snack choice is locally appropriate.
    • Erros de gravação
      Angie would never be able to be a surrogate without having a child of her own first. All reputable surrogacy agencies in the US require their surrogates to have had at least one full-term, live birth before becoming a surrogate.
    • Citações

      Kate Holbrook: Did you just stick your gum under my coffee table?

      Angie Ostrowiski: [nervous] I don't know.

      Kate Holbrook: What do you mean, you don't know? You think you're at an Arby's right now?

      Angie Ostrowiski: You know what? I wish I was at an Arby's 'cause there's better food and cooler people there!

      Kate Holbrook: [looks under the coffee table] Did you stick *all* this gum under here?

      Angie Ostrowiski: I don't know! Maybe you stuck some of it under there.

      Kate Holbrook: Yeah, actually, you might be right. 'Cause sometimes, when I work a really long day, I like to come home and chew a huge wad of Bubblicious gum and stick it under my reclaimed barnwood coffee table!

      Angie Ostrowiski: Bitch, I don't know your life!

    • Conexões
      Edited into Yoostar 2: In the Movies (2011)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Mistletoe
      Written by Colbie Caillat, Stacy Blue, and Mikal Blue

      Performed by Colbie Caillat

      Courtesy of Universal Records

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes22

    • How long is Baby Mama?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Is "Baby Mama" based on a book?
    • How do they make Kate look like she is driving her car?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 25 de abril de 2008 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Mamá por encargo
    • Locações de filme
      • Druids Bar & Restaurant, Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan, Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA(interiors)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Broadway Video
      • Michaels Goldwyn
      • Relativity Media
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 30.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 60.494.212
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 17.407.110
      • 27 de abr. de 2008
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 64.444.713
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 39 min(99 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • SDDS
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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