Undoubtedly, the making of Boss Baby (2017, dir. Tom McGrath) involved some moments of
imagination and creativity. Choosing Alec Baldwin to voice the boss baby
certainly was a promising move. But Baldwin's voice, and his cheeky satirical
persona, are poorly used. They are hardly used at all. I think Baldwin was
chosen to attract viewers familiar with his work in 30 Rock and Saturday Night
Live. Children, young children particularly, may find this film
entertaining. As an adult who came to it with some hopes of comedy and satire,
I didn't find much. It was a silly film that must've been made mainly in the
hopes of large ticket revenues. I don't know if that goal was accomplished, and
it really doesn't matter. The motives behind it might involve tax breaks or greed,
but they didn't involve the creation of anything truly interesting or
entertaining or artful. Would I show this film to a child? No. I wouldn't want
to expose a child to such a cynical, crass, low, and exploitative entertainment.
What can I say about this film that's worth saying? I'm
thinking long and hard. I didn't like it. I had difficulty staying awake while
watching it. I hated it. This film is a good example of why the film industry
is in crisis, why really good films are not being made, or only rarely being made.
If I compare this film to some of the old Warner Brothers cartoons, I might
find a remote connection. But the really good Warner Brothers cartoons were artful,
and well made, and entertaining. There's nothing, nothing, in this film that
approaches the best of the Bugs Bunny or Roadrunner or Daffy Duck cartoons,
nothing, nothing at all. Nothing in this film that comes close to being
comparable to the good animated films being made by Disney Studios or by Pixar
or by other companies that emulate them.
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