Release Date: May 7
Director: Thomas Balmès
Producers: Alain Chabat, Amandine Billot, Christine Rouxel
Starring: Ponijao, Bayar, Mari, Hattie
Studio/Run Time: Focus Features, 79 min.
The kids are alright
If you’re averse to cute things—raindrops, roses, whiskers on kittens etc.—then Babies probably isn’t for you. Directed by Thomas Balmès, this beautifully shot film follows four infants (one each in Namibia, Mongolia, Tokyo and San Francisco) from birth to their first steps.
The children have no dialogue, obviously, and their parents have minimal roles. But Babies offers surprising moments of both tension and humor: Bayar, in Mongolia, is left alone in a field among cows; a grumpy Mari in Tokyo struggles with a toy; Hattie in San Francisco masters the art of banana eating; and the daily rituals of Ponijao and her family in Namibia are fascinating if only because their culture of communal child-rearing is so far removed from Western practices. Babies is billed as nonfiction and not as a documentary; the film is devoid of narrative structure, and makes a point to side-step the grumpy underbelly of child-rearing. Yet it still offers a clear and resonant message of common, shared humanity, providing contours to the film’s nebulous aesthetic even as it straddles the line between reality and fairy tale.
Watch the trailer for Babies:

Focus Features Just Nabbed Sam Mendes for…
A documentary made by Thomas Balmes and Focus Features, exhibits 4 babies in 4 unique cultures throughout the first year of their life. The documentary is mostly just video footage with background music, but one of the babies was filmed in California. The film, Babies, picked a San Francisco mother and child as one of the 4 babies. Thomas Balmes might face charges he violated the child labor laws of California. One specifically cited is; that infants can only be filmed for 20 minutes daily, have a nurse present, and more stipulations. Balmes' protection is that he filmed the children inside their normal environment, not as baby actors. I realize these laws and regulations are to guard kids but come on, are we likely to press charges on each and every mom that tapes her child's soccer game for an hour and posts it on their website for the world to see?
"Hey guys lets make a movie about babies"
"OK Sure, what's the plot?"
"Uhhh I don't...I'm not..not really sure yet"
"Ok no plot, do we have a title?"
"Uhh Babies?"
"Let's do it!!!"