The Boss Baby: Family Business
It is one of those movies that almost made me cry, though most movies I watch recently almost made me cry too.
The movie begins with the story of Tim Templeton, who grew up to become the husband of Carol and father of Tabitha and Tina. He also tells of what happened with the other characters of the previous movie, where his baby brother Ted became a CEO who is never there but always sends "inappropriately lavish gifts" to Tim's family.
The movie kicked off when Tina was discovered to be from Baby Corp. and was on a secret mission to find out what the principal of Tabitha's school, Dr. Erwin Armstrong is up to. Tina, Tim, and Ted then set out to complete the mission, finding out that Dr. Armstrong was acutally a baby planning to get rid of all parents.
During the mission, Tim and Ted had some disputes, revealing that Tim didn't attend Ted's two graduations while Ted didn't attend Tim's one wedding. They eventually reconciled in the "Game Over Room", where they were almost killed if it weren't for Tabitha's pet horse Precious.
After Tabitha was disappointed that her father wasn't there to see her sing in the Holiday Pageant, she was comforted by Tina, who revealed her identity and the fact that their father and uncle were there all the time. Tim, Ted, Tina, and Tabitha then set out to complete the mission by destroying Dr. Armstrong's server, bringing back the parents turned by Dr. Armstrong into mindless zombies by the QT-Snap App, Dr. Armstrong's creation.
The movie ends with the whole Templeton family celebrating Christmas together, with Ted sending a giant statue of Tim, among other "inappropriately lavish gifts," while Dr. Armstrong reconciling with his parents that he walked out of.
What I liked about the movie is the many jokes heard throughout, the relationships between the characters, and the fascinating story, and the messages the movie brought up. Those are the reasons I put this review here, let alone me recommending this movie.
Finally, it is in this movie where Ted quoted Tina, "Just because you grow up, doesn't mean you have to grow apart."