When The Boss Baby debuted in the spring of 2017, it split critics and audiences into two camps: those who thought the familiar CG-animated romp got a significant boost from its mischievous, Looney Tunes-inspired visual sense, and those who thought it wasn't enough to compensate for the film's erratic plotting. The Boss Baby: Family Business, which arrived four years later, is a depressing example of stalled development, with a stunted concept and character growth that amounts to more (or less) of the same, depending on where one weighed in the first time around.
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What's there in The Boss Baby: Family Business?
Tim Templeton is now fully grown and lives with his wife Carol and their two kids, 8-year-old Tabitha and baby Tina, 30 years after the events of the previous film. Ted Jr., Tim's younger brother, is now a prosperous CEO and seldom visits Tim and his family, instead sending costly presents. Tabitha is behaving more maturely, and one night, while a depressed Tim contemplates the person his daughter is becoming, he hears something from Tina's chamber.
He learns that Tina, like Ted, is a Boss Baby, and that she has been assigned to transport Ted on a particular task. Tim refuses to phone, claiming that he will never arrive, and Tina is encouraged to return to sleep. Tina, on the other hand, leaves Ted a phoney voicemail, leading him to the Templetons' home.
Tim tries to convey to Ted that Tina is a Boss Baby the next morning when he arrives. Tina discloses to Ted that she is a Boss Baby and offers them both magical pacifiers so they may go to BabyCorp. Tina exposes the boys to a new formula that would allow them to revert to childhood for 48 hours, allowing them to go undercover to Tabitha's school and discover what Dr. Erwin Armstrong, the institution's founder and principal, is doing behind their parents' backs.
Tim, now as a 7-year-old, accompanies Tabitha to her class at school, while baby Ted is placed with other babies. Ted enlists the aid of the babies to get him out of the playground so he may investigate at Armstrong's office. Tim also tries to get sent to the principal's office by interrupting class, but instead ends up in “The Box” for a timeout.
Ted learns that Armstrong is a baby who ran away from home after learning he was smarter than his parents and now makes a living by building successful phone apps. On B-Day, his ultimate goal is to eliminate all parents so that they can no longer instruct their children what to do. Tina makes a show of leaving and claims that they will continue the task alone after being unable to contact BabyCorp and seeing that the brothers are once again splitting apart.
Who are part of Voice Cast?
Alexander Rae Baldwin III voiced Ted Templeton Jr. / Boss Baby
Tim's younger brother, Tina and Tabitha's uncle, Carol's brother-in-law, and Ted Sr. and Janice's younger son are all former BabyCorp executives.
He is an actor, writer, comedian, film producer, and political activist from the United States. He is the eldest of the Baldwin family's four acting brothers. Baldwin rose to prominence after starring in the CBS primetime serial drama Knots Landing in the sixth and seventh seasons.
James Marsden voiced as Tim Templeton
is an actor, singer, and former model from the United States. Marsden began his acting career as a guest performer on TV series. In the first film, Marsden takes the position of Tobey Maguire and Miles Bakshi, who played the adult Tim and the younger Tim, respectively.
Amy Sedaris voiced as Tina Templeton
In the first film, Marsden takes the position of Tobey Maguire and Miles Bakshi, who played the adult Tim and the younger Tim, respectively. She is an actor, comedian, and writer from the United States. Strangers with Candy, in which she played Jerri Blank, was her breakthrough performance.
Jeff Goldblum voiced as Dr. Erwin Armstrong
A bright child who has devised a plan to eliminate all adults. He is an actor and musician from the United States. He has appeared in some of the most successful films of his age, including Jurassic Park (1993) and Independence Day (1996), as well as its sequels.