


The previous flick, loosely based on Marla Frazee’s picture books, was a happy surprise in that it was easily one of DWA’s most aggressively weird and chaotic comedies. No, it’s not banking on decades-old franchise nostalgia, nor is it bringing back beloved franchise actors who have been MIA for the last handful of installments, but you get the idea. 'The Boss Baby: Family Business' Dreamworks and UniversalĪt a glance, the sequel (which presumably doesn’t demand knowledge of Netflix’s pretty damn good Boss Baby: Back in Business episodic) is skipping ahead to make a glorified “legacy sequel.” The kid stars (Tim and Ted) of the first film now aged to adulthood and acting as the “elders” to Tim’s seven-year-old daughter as she reveals herself as a Bab圜orp agent as well.
