Big Daddy

June 25th, 1999







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Big Daddy

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Still of Joey Lauren Adams in Big DaddyBig DaddyLeslie Mann at event of Big DaddyStill of Adam Sandler in Big DaddySonny & Julian in the parkSonny in the market with Corinne

Plot
A lazy law school grad adopts a kid to impress his girlfriend, but everything doesn't go as planned and he becomes the unlikely foster father.

Release Year: 1999

Rating: 6.2/10 (72,425 voted)

Critic's Score: 41/100

Director: Dennis Dugan

Stars: Adam Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams, Jon Stewart

Storyline
Sonny Koufax is 32 years old. He's a law school graduate. He's got a nice apartment in Manhattan. There's just one problem. He does nothing, except sit on his butt and live off an investment that was the result of a meager lawsuit he won a year ago. But after his fed up girlfriend leaves him, he comes up with the ingenious idea to adopt a five year old boy to showcase his newfound maturity. But things don't go as planned, and Sonny finds himself the unlikely foster father that will change his perspective on just looking out for himself.

Writers: Steve Franks, Steve Franks

Cast:
Adam Sandler - Sonny Koufax
Joey Lauren Adams - Layla Maloney
Jon Stewart - Kevin Gerrity
Cole Sprouse - Julian 'Frankenstien' McGrath
Dylan Sprouse - Julian 'Frankenstien' McGrath
Josh Mostel - Arthur Brooks
Leslie Mann - Corinne Maloney
Allen Covert - Phil D'Amato
Rob Schneider - Delivery Guy
Kristy Swanson - Vanessa
Joseph Bologna - Lenny Koufax
Peter Dante - Tommy Grayton
Jonathan Loughran - Mike
Steve Buscemi - Homeless Guy
Tim Herlihy - Singing Kangaroo

Taglines: Nature called. Look who answered.



Details

Official Website: Big Daddy |

Release Date: 25 June 1999

Filming Locations: Central Park, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA

Box Office Details

Budget: $34,200,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: $41,536,370 (USA) (27 June 1999) (3027 Screens)

Gross: $163,479,795 (USA) (31 October 1999)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Adam Sandler provided the voice of the rollerblader who fell over a stick and yells "Goddamn stick!"

Goofs:
Continuity: When Sonny is walking back to couch after tuning the television and says, "Let's do it, Rangers," he places his Pepsi behind the Chunk Chip bag. In the next shot when he says, "How you doing?" to Julian, the Pepsi is to the right behind the Cheetos Bag.

Quotes:
Sonny: Don't worry about me making money. I'm in love with a woman who makes plenty of it. She'll be my sugar mamma.
Homeless Guy: I gotta get me one of those.



User Review

generally likable comedy

Rating: 7/10



It's hard not to like "Big Daddy", though diehard fans of Adam Sandler may well cringe at this further step in the sentimentalization of the comic actor. For although this film has raised the hackles of a number of overly sensitive worrywarts for its seeming endorsement of permissive parenting, the film is, in reality, far more soft-hearted than hard-edged. Actually, this seems to be, probably, the wisest direction for Sandler to go in at the moment because, as an actor, he conveys an aura of genuine likability that fits well with his Average Joe persona. "Big Daddy" might have been a better film if it had not given in so easily to sentimentality and predictable emotional uplift, but Sandler's deadpan portrayal of an immature adult forced to grow up into responsibility-laden fatherhood makes the film relatively enjoyable.

Sandler portrays a 30-something loser living in South Manhattan, who has been milking a minor foot injury to the tune of a $200,000 court settlement and whose life, consequently, consists of miniscule employment, a general lack of direction, and a girlfriend who's ready to move on to an older man with a "5-year plan". When a little boy suddenly shows up on his doorstep (the hitherto unknown son of a friend of his), Sandler decides to temporarily take him under his wing in the hopes of winning his girlfriend back. Thus, a man with almost no resources of adult maturity attempts to instill skewed life lessons into a willing, highly impressionable young mind. This leads to Sandler's teaching the boy to indulge in predictable, but surprisingly timid, antisocial behavior such as urinating on public buildings, staying up late, tripping unsuspecting rollerbladers etc. The film is not always at its peak of creative freshness at such times, but Sandler's lowkey cynicism provides some humor.

As Sandler grows to care for his tot and the inevitable forces array themselves against him to take the child away, the film veers off in the direction of sappiness and maudlin tearjerking. One may be moved at times, but one also craves the satirical sharpness and bite that a more courageous screenplay might have provided.

The movie does display an enlightened view of gays (though Hollywood has yet to get past the point where gay characters can do more than merely twinkle at each other), but it loses points for its rather nasty tone towards old people. Still, any film designed to send Dr. Laura into spasms of psychoanalytical outrage should be respected and honored.

Overall, "Big Daddy" is a movie that, if it had taken more audacious pathways, might have been a firstrate comedy. As it is, it provides numerous chuckles and a cuddly warm feeling - and that, given the state of much of big screen comedy these days, is about all we dare allow ourselves to expect.





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