Molly Gunn has never worked a day in her life and has lived like a queen since her father, a famous rock 'n' roll star, died and left her his fortune. But when she lost her all money, she has to start working as a nanny of a 8-year-old girl, whose serious attitude is the opposite of Molly's carefree one.
9 September 1955, Long Island, New York City, New York, USA
8 August 1980, Dallas, Texas, USA
27 November 1963, Chicago, Illinois, USA
25 September 1961, Westwood, California, USA
1 October 1973, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
27 August 1925, Seneca County, Ohio, USA
12 April 1974, Los Angeles, California, USA
22 June 1974, New York City, New York, USA
27 October 1943, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
20 April 1972, Sharonville, Ohio, USA
20 May 1963, Torrance, California, USA
21 March 1979, West Plains, Missouri, USA
November 07, 2012
The sheer charisma of the performances - from a screwball Murphy and a caustic Fanning - manages to float a sentimental script that frequently fizzes where it should pop.
August 21, 2003
Yakin shuns caricature. His affection for all his feckless characters, even Fanning's narcissistic mom (Heather Locklear), is evident.
August 21, 2003
Combine two mannered performances with a script intent on achieving maximum cuteness, and you've got one wince-inducing sugar rush.
September 26, 2003
Though I found Mr. Yakin's direction unexpectedly imaginative, and the script often incongruously subtle, I couldn't get into the spirit of all the whimsy, the reason being the surprising lack of charm in the two leads.
August 21, 2003
Gives chick flicks a bad name.
April 29, 2009
Brought down with emotional manipulation, melodrama, and just a bi-polar mood.
February 28, 2004
horribly misguided
January 07, 2010
Fanning practically dares the audience to throw sharp objects at the screen with her thoroughly obnoxious performance.
December 29, 2010
A lame, predictable comedy.
January 09, 2004
'El resultado es bastante mediocre, pues la cinta es bastante predecible y francamente aburrida'
August 21, 2003
Can two over-pampered but fundamentally lonely persons of the blonde female persuasion bond meaningfully with each other while shopping?
August 19, 2003
Locates Fanning's 'maturity' in a fear of germs that comes off as borderline psychotic, and Murphy's childlike free spirit in her apparent inability to avoid walking into walls.

