Baby Geniuses

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Baby Geniuses
Baby geniuses poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBob Clark
Screenplay by
  • Bob Clark
  • Greg Michael
Story by
Produced bySteven Paul
Starring
CinematographyStephen M. Katz
Edited byStan Cole
Music byPaul Zaza
Production
companies
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release date
  • March 12, 1999 (1999-03-12)
Running time
95 minutes[1][2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$12 million[3]
Box office$36.5 million[3]

Baby Geniuses is a 1999 American family comedy film directed by Bob Clark and written by Clark and Greg Michael based on a story by Clark, Steven Paul, Francisca Matos, and Robert Grasmere, and starring Kathleen Turner, Christopher Lloyd, Kim Cattrall, Peter MacNicol, and Ruby Dee.

The film has the distinction of being the first full-length feature to use computer-generated imagery for the synthesis of human visual speech. 2D warping techniques were used to digitally animate the mouth viseme shapes of the babies which were originally shot with their mouths closed. The viseme shapes were sampled from syllables uttered by the babies on the set.

The film grossed over $36 million worldwide.[3] In 2004, it was followed by a sequel, Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2, which was a box office bomb, and received reviews even more critical than the first film, getting nominated for Worst Picture at the 25th Golden Raspberry Awards.

Plot[]

Two scientists, Dr. Elena Kinder (Kathleen Turner) and Dr. Heep (Christopher Lloyd), use genius-baby studies to fund BabyCo's theme park "Joyworld". According to Dr. Kinder's research on toddlers/babies, babies are born possessing vast, universal knowledge and speak a secret yet impossible-to-translate baby pre-language called Babytalk. However, at age 2–3, the knowledge and language are lost as the babies "cross over" by learning how to speak human languages. All babies raised in Dr. Kinder's underground research facility were adopted from the orphanages Babyco supports (As they serve to filter out which babies should be raised under the Kinder Method and which babies shouldn't be raised under the Kinder Method) and transformed into small geniuses through use of the Kinder Method, and then used in experiments to decipher this secret yet impossible-to-translate language used by the eight baby geniuses.

One mischievous toddler, Sylvester (the only one of her toddlers raised via use of the superior version of the Kinder Method), nicknamed "Sly", makes repeated attempts to escape Dr. Kinder's research facility. One night, Sylvester goes into a diaper truck and succeeds. The next morning, he is surprised to run into his long-lost normal twin brother, Whit, in a Joyworld playground. Although Sylvester and Whit share a telepathic bond, each has no idea of the other's existence. The guards from Dr. Kinder's research facility capture Whit, mistaking him for Sylvester, and take him back to Dr. Kinder's research facility. Sylvester is taken home by Whit's adopted mother, Robin (Kim Cattrall), who is Dr. Kinder's niece. Dr. Kinder and the seven other baby-geniuses are shocked that Whit and Sylvester switched places at the mall, but Dr. Kinder becomes excited and begins to see this as an opportunity to do a cross evaluation on the twins. However, when she comes to Dan Bobbin's (Peter MacNicol) place, she realizes that Dan can understand babies. After the attempts to retrieve Sylvester fail, Dr. Kinder decides to move the research facility to Liechtenstein, and they have no choice but to make Whit be the only normal baby to be raised in this research facility until they can find a possible way to get Sylvester back to her research facility.

The babies at Bobbin's place hypnotize Lenny (Dom DeLuise), the bus driver, to drive to Dr. Kinder's research facility. Once at the research facility, Sylvester goes to the control room to set the robots from the theme park on the lab scientists. When the Bobbins return home, their natural daughter Carrie tells her father that the children are in Dr. Kinder's research facility. At the end of the fight, Dr. Kinder captures Whit and takes him to the helicopter pad on the roof. Robin and Dan chase them to the roof, where Dr. Kinder reveals that she and Robin are not related and that Robin was adopted at age 2. After Dr. Kinder is arrested by the police, Sylvester and Whit come together on the roof to cross over.

Dan and Robin adopt Sylvester. Dan is still curious of the secrets of life; but, as the twins have crossed over, they no longer know those secrets. Carrie, their sister, doesn't reveal anything (just giving her father a Sly smile) because adults are never meant to know their secrets.

Cast[]

Production[]

Baby Geniuses was one of the final films to be produced under Sony's Triumph Films label before it shuttered in 1997.[4]

Critical reception[]

Baby Geniuses received overwhelmingly negative reviews, being panned by critics and audiences alike. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 2% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 45 reviews. Its final consensus reads: "Flat direction and actors who look embarrassed to be onscreen make Baby Geniuses worse than the premise suggests."[5] The film received a normalized score of 6 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 14 critics, indicating the reviews as "overwhelming dislike".[6]

Roger Ebert gave the film 1.5 stars out of 4, writing, "Bad films are easy to make, but a film as unpleasant as Baby Geniuses achieves a kind of grandeur. And it proves something I've long suspected: Babies are cute only when they're being babies. When they're presented as miniature adults (on greeting cards, in TV commercials or especially in this movie), there is something so fundamentally wrong that our human instincts cry out in protest."[7]

Box office[]

The film made over $5 million in its opening weekend,[8] and was the 10th highest-grossing PG-rated movie of 1999.[9]

Awards and nominations[]

Award Category Subject Result
Stinkers Bad Movie Awards[10] Worst Picture Steven Paul Nominated
Most Painfully Unfunny Comedy Nominated
Worst Director Bob Clark Won
Worst Child Performer Leo, Gerry and Myles Fitzgerald Nominated
Least "Special" Special Effects Nominated

Sequel and other media[]

Although the film was not received well by critics, a sequel was made, titled Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2, due to its commercial success on home video. The sequel, like the original, was directed by Bob Clark and is widely considered among the worst films of all time.

In 2011, an original series based on the films was announced. The series has so far aired in Italy[11] and the Far East. Additionally, the series was released as a set of movies. Baby Geniuses and the Mystery of the Crown Jewels, which features episodes 1–4, was released directly to video in 2013. Episodes 5–8, Baby Geniuses and the Treasures of Egypt, came out in 2014, and episodes 9–12, were released as Baby Geniuses and the Space Baby in 2015. The series/movies follow the Baby Squad Investigators, or B.S.I., as they pursue Big Baby (voiced by Christopher Bones), his father Beauregard Burger (Andy Pandini), and the international thief Moriarty (Jon Voight).

References[]

  1. ^ "Baby Geniuses". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  2. ^ "Detail view of Movies Page". afi.com. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  3. ^ a b c Baby Geniuses at Box Office Mojo
  4. ^ "Sony folds low-budget outfit Triumph Films". Variety. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  5. ^ "Baby Geniuses (1999)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved January 13, 2021.
  6. ^ "Baby Geniuses Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved July 4, 2020.
  7. ^ "Baby Geniuses movie review and film summary - Roger Ebert". Retrieved October 30, 2021.
  8. ^ "Baby Geniuses Box Office Totals". Box Office Mojo.
  9. ^ "Baby Geniuses Yearly Chart". Box Office Mojo.
  10. ^ "1999 22nd Hastings Bad Cinema Society Stinker Awards". Stinkers Bad Movie Awards. Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on October 17, 2006. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
  11. ^ "Baby Geniuses 3: BSI (Baby Squad Investigators)". Minerva Pictures.

External links[]

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