

Mrs Doubtfire
Poor disciplinarian father Daniel Hillard, lose custody of his kids after divorce. Then he moves into his wife as a nanny to give his kids full attention.
















4 March 1934, Memphis, Tennessee, USA


10 December 1962, San Francisco, California, USA






31 December 1963, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

5 May 1921, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

24 July 1987, Los Angeles, California, USA



28 April 1949, Boston, Massachusetts, USA



6 February 1932

10 April 1966, Alameda, California, USA

9 March 1942, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA

15 June 1934, Chicago, Illinois, USA



6 June 1954, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA

10 August 1954, Forest Hills, Queens, New York, USA

11 February 1980, Abington, Pennsylvania, USA

2 July 1937, Jasper, Alabama, USA




6 November 1946, Pasadena, California, USA



October 05, 2006
Chris Columbus' only good movie.
August 11, 2005
A genuinely funny comedy.
July 07, 2005
Mrs. Doubtfire is by no means a bad movie-going experience and still holds up as vintage Robin Williams, but it's certainly an odd idea the more you think about it.
March 22, 2008
Modern comedy classic w/Robin Williams in and out of drag.
May 20, 2003
The dress, the mask and Mrs. Doubtfire's gentility are inherently limiting, but nothing holds Mr. Williams back when he's on a roll.
August 17, 2008
The greater story is sacrificed for schticky gags about a guy dressing as an old woman.
January 01, 2000
The film is not as amusing as the premise, and there were long stretches when I'd had quite enough of Mrs. Doubtfire.
April 07, 2008
I've rarely laughed so much at a movie I generally disliked.
December 29, 2007
spectacular
February 09, 2006
Sit-com stuff, then, with laboured farcical interludes, and a mushy post-feminist sensibility. Funny notwithstanding.
January 01, 2000
Williams has to break out of a second-rate "Tootsie" imitation, ankles clamped in pathos and face covered in latex. He pulls it off in the end, but it's not pretty.
July 22, 2008
Although overly sappy in places and probably 20 minutes too long, this Robin Williams-in-drag vehicle provides the comic a slick surface for doing his shtick, within a story possessing broad family appeal.