Give Me My Baby (2016) Poster

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5/10
Psycho fertility doctor
phd_travel6 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This week's psycho is the fertility doctor played quite convincingly by Sofia Milos. She tries to impregnate her egg into this woman whose husband dumped the doctor years earlier. Not too many likable characters with an irritating wife and so so hubby but the story moves on quickly enough. For a change the step mom and step daughter have a good relationship.

It's not too bad by LMN standards but not one of the best. True Life stories are better because these made up ones always end up feeling a bit contrived at some point.
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5/10
The Wrong Fertility Doctor...
vnssyndrome8927 September 2023
GIVE ME MY BABY/THE STRANGER INSIDE (TV Movie 2016) *Contains SA Time to read: 3:48 min 5 out of 10 stars

BASIC PLOT: Layla (Kelly Sullivan) and Nate King (Gabriel Hogan) are living their almost perfect life. The only thing that's missing is a child, and they're committed to becoming parents, no matter the trouble or cost. It won't be easy, Nate is a retired golf pro; he makes a living giving lessons at the local golf course. Layla, is a perfume designer. She used to work for a big corporation, but now makes small batch, individualized perfumes. A baby would complete their happy lives, so they are consulting a fertility specialist, Dr. Bianca Hartlin (Sofia Milos). She's knowledgeable, friendly, and comes highly recommended. They did get an appointment a bit too easily, normally it takes months to get into see Dr. Hartlin, but they see that as a good sign of things to come. At first, all goes well, and the procedure seems to work. But Dr. Hartlin has put Layla on lots of fertility shots, and her behavior is changing. Layla is becoming irrational, and her mental stability is deteriorating. After a breakdown at a client's home, Layla is rushed to the hospital. The attending doctor is shocked by the drug regimen Layla's been on, but he does have happy news. Layla is finally pregnant. Now that Layla has everything she's ever wanted, will she be able to hold on to it? Dr. Hartlin is not who she appears to be, but what does she really want? And why is Nate suddenly keeping secrets?

WHAT WORKS: *GREAT COUPLE ENERGY Kelly Sullivan and Gabriel Hogan do a fine job portraying a loving couple. They have no awkwardness, and it adds to the believability of the movie.

*DR. HARTLIN IS A GREAT VILLAINESS Sofia Milos does a great job as the psychotically obsessed Dr. Hartlin.

*GREAT TRAILER! I rarely say that these days, but the trailer was successful.

*GREAT COVER ART! I was very surprised how good the cover art is for this movie. I'd like to give credit for who created it, but alas, our search engines don't give out any real information any more (not unless you're buying something).

WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *ALLISON'S CHARACTER IS TOO EXAGGERATED IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE MOVIE I know this is a melodrama, and I know that means characters and motivations are exaggerated, BUT, having Allison (Laura Hand), Nate's daughter, be so over the top, doesn't work. She called people in their late 30's and early 40's "senior citizens," and "old". She drops out of college, sells her car, and expects her father to just deal. They don't present Nate (Gabriel Hogan) as someone who is good with this type of behavior, so why does she act like it's normal? What's weirder, she only acts like this in the first half of the movie. Then, she becomes much more stable. Why? Melodramas are always better when there's some character development, and when the characters aren't too exaggerated. If they'd reeled in Allison, this movie would have been a whole lot better.

*IF SOMEONE SENT TEXT FROM YOUR PHONE, YOU'D BE ABLE TO SEE THEM Even if they deleted them, they are usually stored on the server, and even if they weren't, you'd be able to see the times and day they were sent. You'd know who you were with, and therefore, who sent them.

*IF LAYLA HAD A CONTRACT WITH SHANNON, AND SHANNON BACKED OUT, NO ONE WOULD EVER WORK WITH SHANNON AGAIN. Jason (David A. Gregory), tells Layla that because of a few texts, Shannon (Brooke Hogan), is not going to honor their legal contact. Layla (correctly) says she'll sue, and he says, if she does no one will ever work with her again. But the same would apply to Shannon, and there's no way her legal advisors would allow her to do something like that. It's a BS plot device, THAT DOESN'T WORK IN REAL LIFE! Having Layla have a breakdown at Shannon's filming location, THAT WORKS. Having Jason say no lawyer would take Layla's case against Shannon, is asinine! The public would be more likely to believe bad things about a reality star, not an unknown perfume designer. Danny J. Boyle and Guy Nicolucci should have reworked the whole scene, because it's disruptive, to an otherwise good made-for-tv movie.

*DR. HARTLIN DRUGS, RAPES, AND CONCEALS HER IDENTITY AND NATE DOESN'T TELL HIS WIFE?! By not telling Layla what Dr. Hartlin has done, he puts her and the baby at risk. No one would do that, after considering the consequences.

*AFTER DR. HARTLIN TRASHES THE HOUSE, THEY "SUDDENLY" REALIZE SHE'S DANGEROUS? Why does Nate go confront Dr. Hartlin in person? And why don't they call the police on the way over to her office?

*AND HERE'S WHERE WE CAN TELL IT'S WRITTEN BY MEN... *Why don't we call it rape, when a man is sexually assaulted? He's drugged, he fights his attacker, he yells, "STOP, NO!" THAT'S RAPE GUYS!

*Pregnant Layla escapes the doctors building, with her drugged husband in tow. She gets him in the car, is driving away, and Dr. Hartlin stops in front in them, and beats on the car. Does Layla drive around her? Does she drive over her (my choice)? NO! She begs her unconscious husband to wake up and help her. And that my friends, is a tale-tell sign this is written by men. Even a meek woman (which Layla is not), finds her strength when she's pregnant, and her family is threatened. A strong woman, would run that b*itch over! These types of tropes don't help your screenplay (I'm talking to you Danny J. Boyle and Guy Nicolucci), it makes women throw things at the screen. Ask yourself, as men, why do you need women to be so dependent? Also, ask yourself, who your main viewers are? Do you think women would appreciate these types of tropes?

*CONTINUITY ERROR AT THE 1:02 MARK When Nate is entering the parking garage to confront Dr. Hartlin, his convertible top is down. The next scene shows him pulling into a parking spot, and the top is up. Most modern vehicles don't allow them to be put up or down while the car is in motion.

TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *If you like made-for-tv melodramas, then you'll like this. It's not to be taken too seriously, it's lazy afternoon faire. If you like your movies with lots of character development, and in depth, believable plotlines, then STOP WATCHING MADE-FOR-TV MELODRAMAS!

CLOSING NOTES: *Contains sexual assault.

*This is a made-for-tv movie, please keep that in mind before you watch\rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.

*I have no connection to the film, or production in ANY way. This review was NOT written in ANY way by a bot. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews, and better entertainment. Hope I helped you out.
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6/10
A Story of Motherhood
lavatch1 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"Give Me My Baby" (a.k.a., "The Stranger Inside") is an overwhelmingly unpleasant film with graphic and gratuitous medical scenes. There is one lengthy montage of the protagonist, Layla Talbot, receiving injection after injection of fertility hormones. And the demented doctor ordering the treatment is the film's deranged villainess.

Layla and her husband Nate are trying their best to have a baby. But the film dwells on the grueling therapeutic plan in which Layla has "the oocyte from the front wall and six eggs removed." Hideous bruises appear on her arms and legs. And, as the film develops, it become more and more apparent that Dr. Hartlin is engaging in dastardly malpractice.

Dr. Bianca Hartlin (a.k.a., "Cee Cee" Dolan) is not only a charlatan, but is a complete psychopath willing to stop at nothing to get her college boyfriend (Nate) back in her life and use Layla as the repository for her own baby.

Early in the film, it was clear that Dr. Hartlin had dumped Layla's harvested eggs in the trash and substituted her own. For this reason, it was disingenuous on the part of the filmmakers to make the claim at the end that a DNA test demonstrated that Layla's baby was formed from her own egg.

The most interesting part of the film and one that remained only as a subplot was the fascinating perfume business that Layla had started. Her "perfume organ" was the work of fifteen years in the personal creation of original fragrances. But, again, the filmmakers lapsed into excessive unpleasantness when Dr. Hartlin found a way to destroy Layla's life's work.

It was hardly redeeming when the film's denouement suggested that a year after her nightmare had ended, she had somehow recreated her fragrance inventory. Her delight in reuniting with her client Susanna Ball seemed flat and unconvincing with the filmmakers' sorry attempt at humor in referring to Layla's connection with Susanna as "Fetal Attraction." The film was more successful in underscoring Layla's dedication to becoming a parent and finally being able to celebrate the joys of motherhood.
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The wife made no sense
ivegonemod14 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The movie wasn't horrible, but the ending made it a lot worse than it would have been.

The wife goes from not believing anything the husband has to say about whether he had an affair or not, to not even caring if he did roughly 5 minutes later.

She learns some news that should at the very least cause her to continue believing that her husband may have cheated with the other woman, but she is extremely nonchalant about it, she basically shrugs it off in one second.

If someone could change their frame of mind that quickly, how angry could they have been in the first place?

In the end, the big news that the wife found out was not even discussed between the couple. We don't get to hear what she actually thought about it, we don't get to hear what the husband had to say for himself about hiding his past.
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2/10
Eggs
pearlramirez-0819124 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Didn't explain how eggs got switched? So the Dr. through the wife's away and instead used hers eggs and at the end got proven that it's really the wife's. Come on!! Like the Dr. Going to make that mistake switching it to the wife? Then who's eggs got thrown? Lol. Looks like end was finished in a hurry.
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1/10
Absolute drivel!
jhmoondance4 September 2018
Total waste of air time and my time. There was no suspense, it was completely predictable and a waste of money spent on the production of absurdly stalwart acting. A shambles from start to finish.
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2/10
Bad
campergrl4 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The wife was so bad and did not act maternal at all. The acting was so bad. I'm sorry I wasted my time on this movie. When she rescues her husband out of the hospital she is ready to leave without her stepdaughter. I mean really! How could you forget your stepdaughter! This shows how idiotic this movie is. I wouldn't waste my time on it. It's just all different levels of bad. It's definitely a low budget movie. Watch it for free on a a channel. Definitely do not buy or rent this. It is not worth the money trust me. Even as a low budget movie they could have found people who could actually act.
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