3 Men and a Baby

3 Men and a Baby(1987)

PG
11/27/1987 (US)Comedy1h 42m
6.2

"They changed her diapers. She changed their lives."

Overview

Three bachelors find themselves forced to take care of a baby left by one of the guy's girlfriends.

Jim Cruickshank

Screenplay

James Orr

Screenplay

Leonard Nimoy

Director

Where to Watch

Stream

Disney Plus

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Part of the 3 Men Collection

Tom Selleck double bill. In 'Three Men and a Baby', bachelors Peter Mitchell (Tom Selleck), Jack Holden (Ted Danson) and Michael Kellam (Steve Guttenberg) live together in an opulent Manhattan penthouse. While Jack is away, a 'package' arrives for him: a baby girl. Peter and Michael are forced to cope with the rigours of childcare until Jack returns to explain. In the sequel 'Three Men and a Little Lady', Mary is now five years old and her mother, Sylvia, wants to find a 'real' father for her child - who is still living with the three bachelors. When Edward (Christopher Cazenove) proposes, Sylvia accepts - much to the fury of the three dads and Mary.

Media

Three Men and a Baby 1987 TV trailer

Three Men and a Baby 1987 TV trailer

Trailer

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
6.0

Written on December 31, 2023

"Jack" (Ted Danson), "Michael" (Steve Guttenburg) and "Peter" (Tom Selleck) live the lives of three reasonably well-off bachelors until they open the door one morning to find a little bundle of joy complete with a note declaring that "Jack" is the father and that the young girl is all their's! Panic sets in but being men of the world, they quickly adapt (!?!) to parenting with all the right nappies, milk bottles - indeed, you name it and they get it wrong! To add to their woes, another knock at their door reveals that a couple of hoodlums are after another sort of powdery mixture and are convinced that these three have it. What now ensues plays just a bit too much to stereotype for me. The baby does way too much irritating screaming - authentic, I know, but not after ten minutes in a cinema! I can't usually tell Danson and Selleck apart at the best of times and Guttenburg seems to add little to the rather far-fetched dynamic that is cluttered rather than augmented by the gangster thread, then a court hearing, then some antics on a construction site. The original concept is the best thing about it but the execution is over-scripted and just too contrived to stay entertaining beyond the first twenty minutes.