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Bébé's Kids

 
Movies:

Bebe's Kids

  • Director: Bruce W. Smith
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Domestic Comedy, Urban Comedy
  • Themes: Nannies and Caregivers, Mischievous Children
  • Main Cast: Faizon Love, Vanessa Bell Calloway, Jonell Green, Marques Houston
  • Release Year: 1992
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 74 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

The first mainstream animated feature film directly aimed at African American audiences, Hyperion Productions' Bebe's Kids is based on a comedy routine by the late Robin Harris. Voiced by Faison Love, Harris endures a "date from hell" when he goes out with the lovely Jamika. His romantic rendezvous is ruined when he is stuck with Jamika's son-as well as Bebe's kids, three little horrors spawned from three different fathers. The worst of the batch is unhousebroken baby Peewee. The film manages within its 74 minute timeframe to skewer such topics as Hip-Hop music, urban riots and whitebread theme parks. Further proof that this is not a Disney flick was provided by the folks from the Motion Picture Production Code office, who bestowed a PG-13 rating upon the film. Bebe's Kids was released theatrically in tandem with the cartoon short Itsy Bitsy Spider, which was later spun off into a TV series. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Tone-Loc - Pee Wee; Myra J. - Dorothea; Nell Carter - Vivian; Louie Anderson - Security Guard; Barry Diamond - Nuclear Father; Judi M. Durand; Tom Everett - 2nd Security Guard; Greg Finley; Philip Glasser - Opie; John La Fayette; Tina Lifford; Rich Little - Richard Nixon; Arvie Lowe, Jr.; Kerrigan Maham - 3rd Security Guard/ Fun World Patrolman; DeVaughn Walter Nixon; Pete Renaday - Announcer/ President Lincoln/ Impericon/ Tommy Toad; Reynaldo Rey - Lush; Brad Sanders - Bartender; Gary Schwartz; Susan Silo - Ticketlady; George D. Wallace - 4th Card Player; Chino "Fats" Williams - 2nd Card Player; Rodney Winfield - 3rd Card Player; John Witherspoon - 1st Card Player; Michelle Davison; Wayne Collins, Jr. - Leon; J.D. Hall; Doris Hess; Jack Lynch - Richie; Eileen Mack Knight; Barbara Iley; Bebe Drake - Barfly

Credit

Chris Buck - Animator, Lennie Graves - Animator, Frans Vischer - Animator, Lynne Southerland - Associate Producer, David R. Cobb - Co-producer, Bruce W. Smith - Director, Lynne Southerland - Editor, John Barnes - Composer (Music Score), Robert L. Harman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Fred Cline - Production Designer, Reginald Hudlin - Producer, Willard Carroll - Producer, Warrington Hudlin - Producer, Thomas L. Wilhite - Producer, Reginald Hudlin - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Johnson Family Vacation; Barbershop; Barbershop 2: Back in Business; My Baby's Daddy; The Original Kings of Comedy; Friday; The Proud Family Movie
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Games: Bebe's Kids
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  • Release Date: 1994
  • Genre: Action
  • Style: Side-Scrolling Combat

Game Description

One of two titles released by the now defunct Motown Games -- who realized the obvious futility in creating games when lacking talent -- Bebe's Kids is an unpolished and shameful attempt at creating a side-scrolling beat-'em-up. While goals in some levels are varied, they can be quite inane, particularly one that involves breaking dishes while your babysitter attempts to catch them. Lashawn and Kahlil both possess standard and special attacks, but their control is frustratingly unresponsive. Colorful graphics are marred by a grittily drawn quality that makes them an eyesore, especially when combined with the choppy animation and lack of detail. Bebe's Kids' music is promising at first, featuring a MIDIfied Hip-Hop style, but after fifteen seconds, loops into a repetitive hell.
~ Geoffrey Douglas Smith, All Game Guide
Wikipedia: Bébé's Kids
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Bébé's Kids

Theatrical Release Poster
Directed by Bruce W. Smith
Produced by Willard Carroll
Thomas L. Wilhite
Written by Robin Harris (characters)
Reginald Hudlin (screenplay)
Starring Faizon Love
Vanessa Bell Calloway
Marques Houston
Nell Carter
Tone Lōc
Tom Everett
Rich Little
Louie Anderson
Music by John Barnes
Editing by Tim Ryder (documentary segment)
Lynne Southerland
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) July 31, 1992 (USA)
Language English
Gross revenue $8,442,162 (USA)

Bébé's Kids (released to VHS and DVD as Robin Harris' Bébé's Kids) is an animated feature produced by the Hudlin Brothers and Hyperion Pictures, directed by Bruce W. Smith, and released on July 31. 1992 by Paramount Pictures. The first ever animated feature to feature an all-Black main cast, the film is based upon comedian Robin Harris' "Bébé's Kids" stand-up comedy act. It features the voices of Faizon Love, Vanessa Bell Calloway, Marques Houston, Nell Carter, and Tone Lōc. Tom Everett, Rich Little and Louie Anderson also lend their voices.

Contents

History

Original stand-up version

In the original act, Robin's prospective girlfriend asks him to take her and her son to FUN WORLD, but when he agrees, she shows up with four kids. As it turns out, Bébé's kids are extremely rambunctious, misbehaved, ill-tempered, and flat-out bad. They terrorize THE FUNLAND CHARACTERS, cut off THE FROG'S feet, try to steal Robin's 8-track/radio while he's listening to it, and make a general menace of themselves. Their reputation is so bad that even the police refuse to mess with them.

In a second act, the Kids and his girlfriend picks up Robin from a bar and make him take them to Las Vegas. Pee Wee picks up a power cord and the power goes out.

Animated film version

The film made a few changes to the original story, reducing the number of Bébé's kids from four to three, and moving the location from Disneyland to a generic amusement park named "Fun World," which is totally demolished by the kids' antics.

Plot

The plot of the film features an animated version of Robin Harris (voiced by Faizon Love) recounting his disastrous first date with the beautiful Jamika (voiced by Calloway). Tagging along for the date are Jamika's mild-mannered son Leon (voiced by Wayne Collins, Jr.) and her best friend Bébé's three (in the words of Harris) "bad kids": Kahlil (voiced by Houston), LaShawn (voiced by Jonell Green), and Pee-Wee (voiced by Tone-Loc). The kids, Harris remarks, are so bad that "even a circus can't train those kids! I thought the devil was through when he made Rosemary's Baby, but ohhhhhhh no! Oh no! Now we got...Bébé's Kids!" His claims are backed up by the fact that whenever a person spots them, they point at them, shout "Run! It's Bébé's Kids!", causing everyone to flee the area.

The group decides to take a trip to the Disneyland-esque Fun World, where they find more trouble than fun. Harris attempts more than once to get rid of the kids so that he and Jamika can be alone, but there is no escaping or besting the kids. "We don't die," says Pee-Wee, "we multiply." Also causing trouble are Harris' alimony-demanding ex-wife Dorthea (voiced by Myra J) and her best friend Vivian (voiced by Carter).

After causing havoc, the kids are taken back to their apartment, where Harris drops them off. While he is initially grateful, he sees the empty apartment they have to go home to, and the unseen Bébé has left the kids with a note that suggests the loveless existence that created them. In the end, while back at the bar where he is telling the story, he realizes what he will become if he only cares about himself. He then returns and finds that Jamika has gotten the kids. They then reconcile and soon they, and BeBe's kids arrive in Las Vegas, which is blacked out when Peewee pulls apart a plug that lights the entire city.

A running gag is that an old woman is in constant danger but never really gets hurt.

Cast

Release and reception

Featuring a hip hop-inspired art style and soundtrack, Bébé's Kids was underpromoted by Paramount[citation needed] and did not do very well until it resurfaced on home video and HBO in 1993[citation needed]. Since then, it has gone on to be a cult classic, later being adapted into a poorly-received [1] video game on the Super Nintendo in 1993. It was released on DVD on October 5, 2004, but was later discontinued by Paramount in March 2008. Contrary to popular belief, the tagline of the film was actually "It's Animation...With an Attitude!" and not simply "It's Animation!" as some trailers have indicated[citation needed]. The original theatrical and home video release were preceded by the short Itsy Bitsy Spider.

External links

  1. ^ "Bebe's Kids for SNES - Gamerankings". http://www.gamerankings.com/snes/588216-bebes-kids/index.html. Retrieved 2009-10-29. 

 
 

 

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