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In New York City, an almost-walker teethed on a seat in a regular movie crowd heavy with kids on Mother's Day soon after "Babies" opened May 7. Willing parents responded to questions from their kids about life without diapers in an African hut, or goats slurping bath water in Mongolia, without admonishments from fellow watchers. A breast-feeding resource center gave away mommy swag bags to the first 50 who showed up for a private Los Angeles screening wearing their babies in carriers or slings. The movie may not get the attention of nature's kid-friendly blockbusters like the G-rated "March of the Penguins," but French filmmaker Thomas Balmes soaks up the lives of three girls and a boy with a naturalist's eye. The stars are Poni, the youngest of nine sisters and brothers in a Himba village near Opuwo, Namibia; Hattie, a blue-eyed girl from San Francisco who begins life attached to wires in a hospital's neonatal intensive care unit; Bayar in Mongolia, who lays swaddled in his yurt as an infant, nonchalantly watching a rooster that hops on the bed; and beautiful Mari in Tokyo who sits on dad's lap playing with a cell phone as he works on his computer. They all eat, Poni sometimes sharing her mother's breasts with another. They all get baths, Poni with a few extra squirts of breast milk on her face and Bayar splashing in a metal basin, basking in the sun without a flinch when a long-horned goat saunters up for a drink.
Similarities with the lives of their own kids is a big draw for parents. "I like the part where she was nursing two babies. And the baby that peed up in the air," said 4-year-old Justin, who watched with his own baby
-- year-old brother Alexander -- and their mom, Tina Busch, in Madison. In Aspen, Colo., Maureen Poschman took her twin 4-year-old girls. She accurately anticipated lots of questions, so they sat in the front row. "They loved that all the kids had pets and that they were snuggling with them," Poschman said, noting one scene when Bayar's surprisingly passive cat is dragged across the floor by a rope around its neck. "We have cats and they're quite gentle with them and they love dogs and all animals, so they giggled at the goat and they worried about the babies being rough with the animals." Would parents recommend the movie for other kids? Many said absolutely. Busch said yes, with caveats. "If the parents openly communicate to their children about body parts and nursing," Busch said. "I can see how it would be really uncomfortable for parents who aren't ready to talk about penises and breasts."
[Associated
Press;
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