The Independent on Saturday

A BOSSY BABY ON A MISSION

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THE BOSS BABY

Running time: 1hr 38min

Starring: Alec Baldwin, Steve Buscemi, Jimmy Kimmel, Lisa Kudrow, Miles Bakshi, Tobey Maguire, James McGrath

Director: Tom McGrath

WORDS like “inventive” and “inspired” are very rarely applied to the parade of cookiecutt­er animated features that pass through the cinema each year, but

The Boss Baby proves a refreshing exception.

Based on the 36-page picture book by Marla Frazee, and featuring the pitch-perfect voice of Alec Baldwin as a onesie suit-wearing, corporate-minded blessed arrival, this DreamWorks Animation effort is a delightful blend of clever and tender that’s certain to tickle audiences of all ages and stages.

Although the set-up might have suggested otherwise, with the depiction of a newborn assembly line that resembled the schematic for last year’s Storks, the scenario breaks from convention with its introducti­on to seven-year-old Tim Templeton (voiced by Miles Bakshi): an only child with an over-active imaginatio­n who’s convinced that he and his parents (Jimmy Kimmel and Lisa Kudrow) form an ideal family unit.

But mom and dad have other ideas, and one day bring home a little brother for Tim – albeit one in full business attire who totes a briefcase and speaks (when adults aren’t within earshot) with Baldwin’s commanding yet cordial tones. It turns out he’s on a mission, dispatched by Babycorp headquarte­rs to prevent a puppy product launch by arch-rival Puppyco that threatens to divert parental affection away from diaper-wearers the world over.

Despite their mutual distrust, Tim and The Boss Baby (tellingly, he hasn’t been given a name, at least in the eyes of his displeased big brother) must form a reluctant alliance to engage in some highly classified industrial espionage, leading to a clever plot resolution that thoughtful­ly ties up any loose ends.

Of course, the concept of infants with not-so infantile voices is nothing new (Family Guy, the

Look Who’s Talking movies), but in the capable hands of director Tom McGrath (co-director of the three Madagascar movies) and screenwrit­er Michael McCullers (Mike Myers’s collaborat­or on the second and third Austin Powers pictures), The Boss Baby has an agenda all its own.

And it’s one that delivers the entertaini­ng goods while addressing universal truths about family bonds and the limitless extent of a child’s imaginatio­n that, like those emotional touchstone­s in the Toy Story films, feel honest and organic to the storytelli­ng. Even the obligatory bodily function jokes are tastefully executed.

While Baldwin, who seems to have cornered the market when it comes to playing conceited man-babies, handily crawls away with the picture (it’s hard to imagine anyone else in the role), he gets solid back-up from his fellow voice cast. They include Steve Buscemi as a former Babycorp exec harbouring a serious grudge; Tobey Maguire, handling narration as Tim’s older self; and James McGrath (the director’s nephew) as Wizzie, Tim’s theatrical, Gandalf-like, talking wizard alarm clock.

Visually, there’s a retro look and feel to the animation that plays affectiona­te homage to Looney

Tunes legends Chuck Jones, Tex Avery and Friz Freleng, while simultaneo­usly drawing upon new wrinkles in computer animation that allow the action to follow the lead of Tim’s vivid fantasy life.

Those nostalgic underpinni­ngs are also nicely incorporat­ed into the appropriat­ely bubbly score by Hans Zimmer and Steve Mazzaro. – Hollywood Reporter

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 ??  ?? SIBLING RIVALRY: A new baby’s arrival causes friction between seven-year-old Tim (voiced by Miles Bakshi) and Boss Baby (Alec Baldwin). But when Tim discovers Boss Baby is actually a spy, they join forces to thwart a plot that involves an epic battle...
SIBLING RIVALRY: A new baby’s arrival causes friction between seven-year-old Tim (voiced by Miles Bakshi) and Boss Baby (Alec Baldwin). But when Tim discovers Boss Baby is actually a spy, they join forces to thwart a plot that involves an epic battle...

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