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Three Men and a Baby

Original title: 3 Men and a Baby
  • 1987
  • PG
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
60K
YOUR RATING
Steve Guttenberg, Tom Selleck, and Ted Danson in Three Men and a Baby (1987)
Three bachelors find themselves forced to take care of a baby left by one of the guys' girlfriends.
Play trailer1:13
1 Video
90 Photos
Quirky ComedyComedyDramaFamily

Jack Holden and his friends, Peter and Michael, spend most of their time having flings with several women in their apartment. Their life changes when a mysterious baby appears at their doors... Read allJack Holden and his friends, Peter and Michael, spend most of their time having flings with several women in their apartment. Their life changes when a mysterious baby appears at their doorstep.Jack Holden and his friends, Peter and Michael, spend most of their time having flings with several women in their apartment. Their life changes when a mysterious baby appears at their doorstep.

  • Director
    • Leonard Nimoy
  • Writers
    • Coline Serreau
    • James Orr
    • Jim Cruickshank
  • Stars
    • Tom Selleck
    • Steve Guttenberg
    • Ted Danson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    60K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Leonard Nimoy
    • Writers
      • Coline Serreau
      • James Orr
      • Jim Cruickshank
    • Stars
      • Tom Selleck
      • Steve Guttenberg
      • Ted Danson
    • 81User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:13
    Trailer

    Photos90

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    Top cast41

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    Tom Selleck
    Tom Selleck
    • Peter Mitchell
    Steve Guttenberg
    Steve Guttenberg
    • Michael Kellam
    Ted Danson
    Ted Danson
    • Jack Holden
    Nancy Travis
    Nancy Travis
    • Sylvia
    Margaret Colin
    Margaret Colin
    • Rebecca
    Alexandra Amini
    Alexandra Amini
    • Patty
    Francine Beers
    • Woman at Gift Shop
    Lisa Blair
    • Mary
    Michelle Blair
    • Mary
    Philip Bosco
    Philip Bosco
    • Detective Melkowitz
    Barbara Budd
    • Dramatic Actress
    Michael Burgess
    Michael Burgess
    • Handsome Man at Party
    Claire Cellucci
    • Angelyne
    Eugene Clark
    Eugene Clark
    • Man at Party #1
    Derek de Lint
    Derek de Lint
    • Jan Clopatz
    Michèle Duquet
    Michèle Duquet
    • Tawnya
    • (as Michelle Duquet)
    David Ferry
    • Telephone Installer
    Dave Foley
    Dave Foley
    • Grocery Store Clerk
    • Director
      • Leonard Nimoy
    • Writers
      • Coline Serreau
      • James Orr
      • Jim Cruickshank
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews81

    6.159.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8TheLittleSongbird

    Thoroughly enjoyable and funny

    I was actually surprised at how much I liked 3 Men and a Baby. I agree there are some hit-and-miss moments, and it does start off slowly, but a vast majority of it is very funny and enjoyable. The story is simple, three bachelors find a baby on the doorstep and before long they are knee-deep in bottles, nappies and goo. No matter how simple this story is it is effective too.

    Leonard Nimoy's direction adeptly keeps the entertainment and comedy afloat and it comes thick and fast, while the script has plenty of funny and engaging moments. The film is very nice visually, especially loved that apartment, and the music is good enough. The acting I had little problem with either, Ted Danson, Steve Guttenberg and Tom Selleck show great chemistry together and deliver great performances individually as each of their characters get increasingly harassed while adapting to changing, feeding and burping duties, and the baby was very cute.

    All in all, very enjoyable and fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    7roghache

    Fun comedy about three confirmed bachelor dads

    This is a really cute, light hearted comedy. The plot may be pretty unrealistic, the ending kooky & unbelievable, and don't get your morals from it, but all in all...it's great fun to watch.

    The story revolves around three carefree bachelors (Peter, Michael, and Jack) who share a New York City apartment. All are busy with their jobs, girlfriends, and social lives and have no intention of settling down anytime soon. While actor Jack is away shooting a movie, a baby is left outside their apartment door with a note indicating that this is Jack's child from an affair with his co star (though he's previously been unaware of this offspring's existence). His two room mates mistakenly believe that they are to deliver the baby to a couple of men who appear at the door asking for 'a package'. Right before they are about to hand the baby over, they realize these men are drug dealers. Then the bachelors have to contend with the baby's care as well as the drug dealers' demands for payment.

    The three bachelors are played by famous name stars...Tom Sellick (Peter, the architect), Steve Guttenberg (Michael, the artist), and Ted Danson (Jack, the actor). Their considerable talents and playboyish charisma have a lot to do with this movie's success. The unlikely trio must learn to juggle the demands of baby care with their careers and social lives. It's really fun to watch them in all the stereotypical hilarious circumstances of diapering and baby tending. The men's paternal instincts come into play and the bachelors grow quite attached to the little tyke.

    Directed by Leonard Nimoy (Spock, my favourite), this is a generally light, mindless, and entertaining movie that shows how these three 'hunks' & confirmed bachelors are won over by little baby Mary. Switch your brain into neutral and enjoy the ride.
    8ElMaruecan82

    Sweet, touching and heart-warming...

    "Three Men and a Cradle" is a classic of French cinema but so are many films that didn't exactly stand the test of time.

    Colline Serreau's story (Oscar-nominated for Best Foreign Language Film) had the most interesting premise with three hardcore bachelors, womanizers and roommates forced to take care of a baby, a discipline they obviously knew nothing about, and then growing into loving and caring surrogate fathers. However the treatment was poor, the acting mostly relied on shouting contests and predictably childish situations and there was a lousy subplot involving a package of drug, the least thing you need in a family-centered comedy. It is fair to concede that the film had a sweetness of its own and was never as enchanting and endearing as when the three men spoke gently and quietly with little baby Marie, singing her a lullaby or just feeling deeply sad when she left (temporarily) the house.

    I never really cared about the remake and presumed it wouldn't be an improvement. How wrong I was! If anything the film proves that a premise isn't enough and the execution can make a difference. There's the same insistence on the bachelors' tumultuous womanizing lives in a well-packed expositional party, Peter (Tom Selleck) is a successful and no-nonsense architect, his way with women is mature and charismatic, there's the more amiable and goofy Michael, the cartoonist (Steve Guttenberg) and Jack (Ted Danson) is the absentee actor. The three friends never date or court the same women, they have their rules on that matter but once little Mary shows her cute little face, they quickly understand that only one member of the female persuasion will impact their lives.

    Something changes indeed when the little cradle abandoned at their house is taken and it's never feel forced or over-the-top, there's no hysteria, no panic, both Selleck and Guttengerg find the perfect tone of bewilderment and pragmatism while trying to deal with a "little insect" who just did poo-poo. When Peter goes to the grocery story, he's got to deal with a series of questions from a nosy little clerk but his face isn't as exaggeratedly stunned as his French counterpart Jean Giraud who looked as if he had never heard about the existence of babies. Selleck delivers a true virtuoso performance because he maintains his cool and never overacts in so many situations where French comedy would have already made everyone scream.

    In fact, even Guttenberg (and later Danson) are sweet and comprehensive and that's the right tune, and I suspect it had to do with the film being directed by a man, Leonard Nimoy of all the people. Let me explain this before I get burned for misogyny. Coline Serreau obviously wanted to give a satirical edge to her story and putting men in situations that are borderline ridicule but by doing so she created some distance with her characters, making them the objects rather than subjects of the farcical situations. In the remake, the funny situation especially one involving the diapers or the feeding timing feel real... and take it from someone who never gets right the side of the shorts-like diapers, is the smiling face supposed to be in the read side or the front??

    Nimoy obviously like this trio and wanted to convey the idea that men can be as valuable and patient as mothers. There's no mean-spiritedness behind and once Danson appears and start to take care of her, some scenes are so genuinely authentic and touching that you never feel the actors are playing, you might even think it's the best role they'd ever play. Guttenberg is cute, Danson has a wonderful moment with his mother (Celeste Holm) but it's Selleck who almost broke my heart in the famous scene where he finally finds little Mary after a one-minute search across the house. Once he holds her in his arms, you know the actor isn't acting. It feels real.

    Also notice that once she becomes part of the family, other visitors are more than happy of that prospect. In the French remake, a baby sitter was bullied out of the house, guests were thrown out because they didn't care about the baby. Margaret Colin plays a love interest who's genuinely touched by the way Peter behaves, especially when they sing in unison "Goodnight, Sweetheart". And once the mother (Sylvia Travis) comes back, there's no hostility whatsoever, although they could at least ask her why she did that. But that's not a film that embarrasses itself with plot conveniences, we earn our happy ending in a way that could have been a copout had the actors not warmed our hearts through some genuinely touching moments. To put it simply, the film is an improvement on the original, which is quite an achievement since the norm is the American remake being lesser.

    I wish however they could write off that lousy heroin drug that was unnecessary (even in the first film) and wasted almost thirty minutes with a resolution that never lives up to the rest. That's the only flaw, one even recognized by the fans, but apart from that, the film captures the true caring nature of fathers, and the love a child can inspire, it's a heartwarming story full of tenderness and sweetness and Selleck is just perfect as the protective father. Directed in 1987, it reflects a time where a film, with no special effects, no genuine plot, no trick but just a great premise and a good heart, could become the highest grossing film of the year, it's not that difficult to make a good film, just be sincere in your approach. We owe Serreau the story but her approach was staged to the limit of fakery, the remake does justice to the story, and it does it so well it could have been a pilot for a successful TV sitcom.
    6SnoopyStyle

    three stars with some charms

    Architect Peter Mitchell (Tom Selleck) has an ex in Rebecca (Margaret Colin). Michael Kellam (Steve Guttenberg) is a sensitive cartoonist. Jack Holden (Ted Danson) is a playboy actor. The three bachelors happily share a Manhattan penthouse with a long line of women coming in and out. Then somebody leaves a baby at their doorstep. A note indicates that Mary is the result of an union between Jack and Sylvia (Nancy Travis). Jack is away doing a TV movie. Peter and Michael are forced to deal with the baby. Jack has a package of drugs delivered to the apartment which is to be picked up by two men. Peter and Michael mistakenly assume the baby to be the package. Narcotics officer Sgt. Melkowitz (Philip Bosco) come to question the guys.

    The combination of the three stars makes this work. Selleck is terrific. This has good comedy and some awkward stuff. I can do without the heroin. It takes the movie down a dark alley. The tone is completely wrong. I would have liked more with Rebecca and Sylvia doesn't need to be British. Overall, it's a mix bag with some laughs.
    8jhaggardjr

    Cute comedy

    "3 Men and a Baby" is a comedy that's cute and funny. Tom Selleck, Steve Guttenberg, and Ted Danson star as three bachelors who live together, and who's lives are changed forever when on one particular day a baby infant is left on their doorstep. The three bachelors are now forced unexpectedly to become fathers to the baby. Plenty of wonderful comedy scenes throughout as the three stars go through the frustrations of having to deal with this infant girl in the early stages, then the baby eventually starts to win them over. If only the filmmakers threw out the subplot involving drugs, then this film would've been a great comedy.

    *** (out of four)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      During the two week rehearsal period before filming began, then-bachelors Tom Selleck and Steve Guttenberg took the long-married Ted Danson out on the town with them, visiting a few Toronto night clubs, bars, and restaurants, to rekindle the feeling of bachelorhood they had to project in the film. The three caused a lot of excitement among the public whenever they went out to party.
    • Goofs
      When Jack's mother comes to visit Mary, you can see in the background what appears to be a little boy standing in front of a window. There is a rumor that this is the ghost of a little boy who died in the apartment in which the film was shot. This rumor is false, as the interiors were all shot on a sound stage in a movie studio. The "ghost" is actually a cardboard cut-out of Jack wearing a tuxedo. This prop appears later in the film, when Mary's mother comes to collect her. Some argue that "it's smaller" or "it's dressed differently", but close examination reveals that it really is the cardboard prop.
    • Quotes

      Michael Kellam: [singing] Hush little baby, don't you cry. When Peter gets home, I'm gonna punch him in the eye.

    • Crazy credits
      There is some baby talk after the credits that plays over the movie studio logo.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Planes, Trains and Automobiles/Cinderella/Three Men and a Baby/Date with an Angel/Teen Wolf Too (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      The Minute I Saw You
      (Theme from "Three Men and a Baby")

      Written by Marvin Hamlisch, David Foster, Carole Bayer Sager and John Parr

      Performed by John Parr

      Courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corp.

      Performed by John Parr

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    FAQ22

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 25, 1987 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tres hombres y un bebé
    • Filming locations
      • Scotia Plaza, Toronto, Ontario, Canada(Construction site that Peter visits is Scotia Plaza being built)
    • Production companies
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Silver Screen Partners III
      • Interscope Communications
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $11,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $167,780,960
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,384,392
      • Nov 29, 1987
    • Gross worldwide
      • $167,780,960
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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