"Look who's talking": everything babies think about us

Returning to my cinephile vein, today I want to refresh your memory a bit and tell you about a movie that most of us have seen. I am referring to the film "Look who's talking" ("Look who's talking", 1989).

Everyone will remember this movie from the late eighties, directed by Amy Heckerling and starring John Travolta ("Grease") and Kirstie Alley (from the series "The Secret of Veronica") for the originality of showing us the thoughts of a baby through the voiceover (in its original version) of Bruce Willis ("The Crystal Jungle").

This is quite original, since it makes us spend a fun and enjoyable time through the overwhelming logic of the child's comments and what they think of us and about our actions.

The film tells the story of a single woman who becomes pregnant with her married lover. Luckily for her, a taxi driver who loves airplane piloting helps her in the child's education.

The success of this film gave rise to two sequels in which sisters and equally talkative dogs were incorporated. In my opinion they are less fun movies than the first one, since they do not have the novel voiceover factor of the little one.

The tape has an original approach, a simple development, and very well carried. Stresses the freshness of the script, and a plot that ends up being trainable. Perhaps its worst point is its excessive simplicity. But it may be appropriate to have a good time and know what do babies think of us and we didn't know it.