Baggage Claim
Pledging to keep herself from being the oldest and the only woman in her entire family never to wed, Montana embarks on a thirty-day, thirty-thousand-mile expedition to charm a potential suitor into becoming her fiancé.
29 July 1975, Greenville, Mississippi, USA
24 April 1964, Cotonou, Benin
8 April 1978, Chicago, Illinois, USA
24 April 1974, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA
4 October 1979, Valinda, California, USA
22 April 1926, Van Nuys, California, USA
21 August 1975, Casablanca, Morocco
4 April 1972, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
6 July 1937, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
5 December 1984, Los Angeles, California, USA
15 December 1979, San Diego, California, USA
24 March 1987, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
December 24, 2013
A tired and manipulative comedy, this new film is one of the most creatively-inert flicks of the year.
September 27, 2013
Man, "Baggage Claim" is terrible.
January 09, 2017
Honestly, I don't know what to say about this movie, because it feels so phenomenally old-fashioned and outdated, so ridiculously conservative and undermining of female independence.
November 03, 2013
There must be better material out there for [Paula Patton] somewhere.
June 23, 2016
Baggage Claim focuses too much on plot and too little on character.
September 27, 2013
A romantic comedy so light and brainless you almost expect it to float away.
September 27, 2013
Nothing in this movie would actually happen, so what's irritating is that it presents itself as a savvy, "Am I right, ladies?" dating commentary.
May 05, 2015
Dutifully assembles crowd-pleasing cliches and chick-lit tropes as if following instructions from an IKEA rom-com catalog.
September 27, 2013
A painfully predictable romance, and a terribly unfunny comedy.
October 23, 2013
If the dating process depicted here is humiliating for the character of Montana Moore, it's liberating for Paula Patton: The actress reveals herself to be a sort of sexier Lucille Ball, agreeably sacrificing her dignity in pursuit of laughs.
September 27, 2013
"Baggage Claim" is so archaic in its depiction of feminine self-worth-and, frankly, so insulting-it's amazing that it's coming out in 2013, not 1963.

