Daddy Day Care: Difference between revisions
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The film was released in the United States on May 9, 2003, by [[Columbia Pictures]]. It received generally negative reviews from critics, but grossed $164.4 million worldwide on a budget of $60 million. The film was followed by two sequels, in the [[Daddy Day Care (film series)|film series of the same name]]. | The film was released in the United States on May 9, 2003, by [[Columbia Pictures]]. It received generally negative reviews from critics, but grossed $164.4 million worldwide on a budget of $60 million. The film was followed by two sequels, in the [[Daddy Day Care (film series)|film series of the same name]]. | ||
==Plot==<!--Word count is | ==Plot==<!--Word count is 665; Per WP:FilmPlot, plot summaries for feature films should be 400 to 700 words; please do not expand it.--> | ||
Charlie Hinton is a marketing executive at a local food | Charlie Hinton is a marketing executive at a local food company called Ample Foods. He and his wife, Kim, have just enrolled their son Ben into Chapman Academy, an [[Hothousing|overly academic]] [[preschool]] overseen by the haughty Gwyneth Harridan. However, on Ben's first day, Charlie, his best friend Phil Ryerson, and 300 others are laid off when the company shuts down their health division due to the poor reception of their vegetable-flavored [[Breakfast cereal|breakfast cereals]]. Charlie breaks the news to Kim and Ben during dinner that night, but assures them he will find a new job. | ||
While Kim supports the family by returning to work as a lawyer, Charlie, after six weeks of job hunting and finding nothing, is forced by the bank to take Ben out of Chapman. Unable to find a satisfactory alternative around town, Charlie decides to open a daycare center in his home with the help of Phil, calling it "Daddy Day Care". Although local parents are [[Gender role|suspicious of men]] working with kids, a few choose their service as it is more affordable and [[Student-centred learning|child-based]]. | While Kim supports the family by returning to work as a lawyer, Charlie, after six weeks of job hunting and finding nothing, is forced by the bank to take Ben out of Chapman. Unable to find a satisfactory alternative around town, Charlie decides to open a daycare center in his home with the help of Phil, calling it "Daddy Day Care". Although local parents are [[Gender role|suspicious of men]] working with kids, a few choose their service as it is more affordable and [[Student-centred learning|child-based]]. | ||
Charlie and Phil open with | Charlie and Phil open Daddy Day Care with nine children and struggle with chaos and personal issues. Angered at losing children to the new competition, Harridan attempts to shut them down by notifying [[child services]]. Charlie and Phil find themselves rectifying problems pointed out by Dan Kubitz, a child services director, to ensure their daycare is suitable for children. Charlie and Phil then hire their former colleague, Marvin, as an additional care provider after Daddy Day Care acquires two more children. In time, they start to enjoy running Daddy Day Care as it grows in popularity, with Charlie delighted to see Ben making friends and enjoying himself. | ||
After Daddy Day Care acquires three more children, Kubitz points out that Charlie's house cannot accommodate more than 12 children. He suggests that Daddy Day Care either remove two kids or find a permanent facility elsewhere. Not willing to remove any of the children, Charlie chooses the latter option. Marvin knows about a suitable vacant building, but they cannot afford it, so Daddy Day Care decides to hold a fundraiser to earn the necessary capital. However, Harridan learns about the event and sabotages it with help from her hesitant assistant Jennifer. As a result, Daddy Day Care does not raise enough money to pay for the building. | |||
Eventually, the food company offers Charlie and Phil their old jobs back at double their salaries, having decided to rehire them and letting them run the whole health division after acting on an earlier idea that Charlie had sarcastically suggested. Harridan also offers to take in their children for a more affordable price if Daddy Day Care shuts down. Charlie and Phil reluctantly accept the offer, leaving Marvin heartbroken and refusing to join them. Ben is also disappointed when Charlie tells him he has to go back to Chapman. The next day at the marketing meeting, Charlie questions his decision after | Eventually, the food company offers Charlie and Phil their old jobs back at double their salaries, having decided to rehire them and letting them run the whole health division after acting on an earlier idea that Charlie had sarcastically suggested. Harridan also offers to take in their children for a more affordable price if Daddy Day Care shuts down. Charlie and Phil reluctantly accept the offer, leaving Marvin heartbroken and refusing to join them. Ben is also disappointed when Charlie tells him he has to go back to Chapman. The next day at the marketing meeting, Charlie questions his decision after realizing the impact that Daddy Day Care has had on Ben and the other children. Deciding that Ben is the most important thing to him, Charlie quits, convincing Phil to join him and his plans of re-opening Daddy Day Care. Informing Marvin of their plans, Charlie confronts Harridan during a [[student orientation]] and tells the parents in attendance how little she cares about their children. After mentioning how much Daddy Day Care changed and helped the children, Charlie declares that Daddy Day Care is reopened and convinces the parents to return. | ||
Six months later, Daddy Day Care manages to buy the building it needs to expand and prospers | Six months later, Daddy Day Care manages to buy the building it needs to expand and prospers with Charlie and Phil successful, Jennifer now working for the center, and Marvin entering a relationship with one of the parents. With Chapman no more, Harridan is forced to work as a [[crossing guard]]. When one of Harridan's former students, Crispin, gives Harridan a flower, it attracts bees, causing her to wave the stop sign to shoo them away and inadvertently create a traffic jam. | ||
==Cast== | ==Cast== | ||
Latest revision as of 17:55, 7 June 2025
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Daddy Day Care is a 2003 American family comedy film starring Eddie Murphy in the lead role, Jeff Garlin, Steve Zahn, Regina King, and Anjelica Huston. Written by Geoff Rodkey and directed by Steve Carr, it marks Murphy and Carr's second collaboration after Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001). The plot follows two fathers who start a child day care out of their home after they are laid off from their corporate jobs.
The film was released in the United States on May 9, 2003, by Columbia Pictures. It received generally negative reviews from critics, but grossed $164.4 million worldwide on a budget of $60 million. The film was followed by two sequels, in the film series of the same name.
Plot
Charlie Hinton is a marketing executive at a local food company called Ample Foods. He and his wife, Kim, have just enrolled their son Ben into Chapman Academy, an overly academic preschool overseen by the haughty Gwyneth Harridan. However, on Ben's first day, Charlie, his best friend Phil Ryerson, and 300 others are laid off when the company shuts down their health division due to the poor reception of their vegetable-flavored breakfast cereals. Charlie breaks the news to Kim and Ben during dinner that night, but assures them he will find a new job.
While Kim supports the family by returning to work as a lawyer, Charlie, after six weeks of job hunting and finding nothing, is forced by the bank to take Ben out of Chapman. Unable to find a satisfactory alternative around town, Charlie decides to open a daycare center in his home with the help of Phil, calling it "Daddy Day Care". Although local parents are suspicious of men working with kids, a few choose their service as it is more affordable and child-based.
Charlie and Phil open Daddy Day Care with nine children and struggle with chaos and personal issues. Angered at losing children to the new competition, Harridan attempts to shut them down by notifying child services. Charlie and Phil find themselves rectifying problems pointed out by Dan Kubitz, a child services director, to ensure their daycare is suitable for children. Charlie and Phil then hire their former colleague, Marvin, as an additional care provider after Daddy Day Care acquires two more children. In time, they start to enjoy running Daddy Day Care as it grows in popularity, with Charlie delighted to see Ben making friends and enjoying himself.
After Daddy Day Care acquires three more children, Kubitz points out that Charlie's house cannot accommodate more than 12 children. He suggests that Daddy Day Care either remove two kids or find a permanent facility elsewhere. Not willing to remove any of the children, Charlie chooses the latter option. Marvin knows about a suitable vacant building, but they cannot afford it, so Daddy Day Care decides to hold a fundraiser to earn the necessary capital. However, Harridan learns about the event and sabotages it with help from her hesitant assistant Jennifer. As a result, Daddy Day Care does not raise enough money to pay for the building.
Eventually, the food company offers Charlie and Phil their old jobs back at double their salaries, having decided to rehire them and letting them run the whole health division after acting on an earlier idea that Charlie had sarcastically suggested. Harridan also offers to take in their children for a more affordable price if Daddy Day Care shuts down. Charlie and Phil reluctantly accept the offer, leaving Marvin heartbroken and refusing to join them. Ben is also disappointed when Charlie tells him he has to go back to Chapman. The next day at the marketing meeting, Charlie questions his decision after realizing the impact that Daddy Day Care has had on Ben and the other children. Deciding that Ben is the most important thing to him, Charlie quits, convincing Phil to join him and his plans of re-opening Daddy Day Care. Informing Marvin of their plans, Charlie confronts Harridan during a student orientation and tells the parents in attendance how little she cares about their children. After mentioning how much Daddy Day Care changed and helped the children, Charlie declares that Daddy Day Care is reopened and convinces the parents to return.
Six months later, Daddy Day Care manages to buy the building it needs to expand and prospers with Charlie and Phil successful, Jennifer now working for the center, and Marvin entering a relationship with one of the parents. With Chapman no more, Harridan is forced to work as a crossing guard. When one of Harridan's former students, Crispin, gives Harridan a flower, it attracts bees, causing her to wave the stop sign to shoo them away and inadvertently create a traffic jam.
Cast
Cheap Trick appear as themselves at the Rock for Daddy Day Care charity event when they perform Surrender.
Production
The film was initially set up at 20th Century Fox, but Fox placed the film into turnaround due to budget concerns. It sold the film to Revolution Studios.[1]
Shooting began on August 1, 2002, in Los Angeles, California and wrapped on November 22.[2]
The film's poster was officially released in December of that year, with the tagline, D-Day is coming.[3]
Reception
Critical response
Template:Rotten Tomatoes prose[4] Template:Metacritic film prose[5] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.[6]
Todd McCarthy from Variety called it "scarcely more amusing than spending ninety minutes in a pre K classroom" and a "comically undernourished junk food snack".[7]
Box office
Despite the negative critical ratings, the film was a box office success, grossing over $160 million worldwide based on a $60 million budget.[8] The film was released in the United Kingdom on July 11, 2003, and opened at No. 3, behind Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle and Bruce Almighty.[9] The next two weekends, the film moved down one place, before finally ending up at No. 10 on August 1.[10][11][12]
Home media
Template:More citations needed section Daddy Day Care was released on DVD in late 2003 by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
Sequels
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Soon after the release of Daddy Day Care, Murphy was rumored to be involved in a sequel film, although he had not signed up for one.[13] A sequel was released on August 8, 2007, titled Daddy Day Camp, with Cuba Gooding Jr. replacing Murphy as Charlie Hinton and Sony once again distributing the film (this time under TriStar). The film was panned by critics, with a 1% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It won the Razzie Award for "Worst Prequel or Sequel". Another sequel, Grand-Daddy Day Care, was released on February 5, 2019, by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment on direct-to-video format. Da'Vone McDonald portrayed Charlie Hinton, who appears as a supporting character.
References
External links
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- Pages with script errors
- Daddy Day Care (film series)
- 2003 films
- 2003 children's films
- 2003 comedy films
- 2000s buddy comedy films
- 2000s children's comedy films
- American buddy comedy films
- Films set in Los Angeles
- Films shot in California
- Films directed by Steve Carr
- Columbia Pictures films
- Revolution Studios films
- Davis Entertainment films
- Films scored by David Newman (composer)
- Films produced by John Davis
- American children's comedy films
- Films produced by Wyck Godfrey
- Films about parenting
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s American films
- English-language buddy comedy films