“The Boss Baby” sees Baldwin’s character who works for Baby Corp. and
is sent to spy on people to find out what babies and parents want.
Part of his job is to belong to a family where seven-year old Tim
(voiced by Miles Bakshi) is having all the attention and time to
himself, but as soon as Boss Baby arrives, his life suddenly changed and
becomes determined to reveal the real Boss Baby. As Tim and his new
brother, Boss Baby come to terms that they must work together to save
both the company and Tim’s parents against an evil plot, they come to
realize that they make a great team.
Baldwin points out that although the central idea of the film is
outrageous and silly, it’s executed with lots of finesse, wit and
imagination. “Our director Tom McGrath and producer Ramsey Naito are so
clever, in terms of how exactly they pull it all off and drive the film.
On top of it all, the movie has a wonderful heart inside it, too, as
Boss Baby is eventually won over by the idea of being part of the
family. Plus, there are a lot of crazy scenes and wild action, because
in animation, you can do anything.”
The actor says his own family went through similar moments of sibling
rival when his son was born. “My wife and I have a daughter who is
three, and before my son was born, she was the princess and was just
adored and catered to by everybody. Then my son came along —and he was
first son, so I just flipped out. At this time, she was two years old.
She would stare at him thinking ‘Something’s got to change around here.
You know we have to fix this!’ So for my daughter, there was a process
to be able to accept her little brother. When she finally gave him a
kiss, we all cried. We thought this day would never come.”
Baldwin says in the movie, Tim goes through a very similar experience.
“He has all this time with his parents. And then in comes Boss Baby
who’s not only a baby, he’s like your worst nightmare of a baby. He’s,
uh, he’s a clever baby. He’s a conniving baby. He’s a Machiavellian
baby, but it wouldn’t work if Tim wasn’t smart too. So we have to make
the Tim character pretty clever too—but, he’s a little devil with a
heart of gold.”
The actor also believes that “The Boss Baby,” like two of his previous
collaborations with DreamWorks—Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa and Rise of
the Guardians—offers the perfect mix of family entertainment,
kid-friendly jokes and things for grown-ups to enjoy and laugh at as
well. “You know, it’s like that Bugs Bunny cartoon where he would whip
out the candelabra and imitate Liberace with all the nuttiness he had.
The kids didn’t understand what he was doing, but the parents did. And
it was all very funny and worked on different levels. That’s why I think
The Boss Baby will appeal to everyone as well.”
“The Boss Baby” opens April 15 (Black Saturday) in cinemas nationwide from 20th Century Fox.
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