Here's the thing: this is a perfectly fine movie that nobody asked for. The 1991 Steve Martin version is a classic; this 2022 remake swaps in Cuban-American culture and Andy Garcia, which adds some fresh flavor, but the recipe is still the same.
Critics were kind (80% on RT), but audiences shrugged (52% RT, 5.9 IMDb). That gap tells you everything—it's competent, well-meaning, and utterly forgettable. The family dynamics are sweet, the cultural representation is genuine, and there's nothing offensive here. But there's also nothing particularly memorable.
If you're looking for a safe family movie night option and you've exhausted everything else, sure, throw it on. Your teens won't hate it, and you might get a little misty thinking about your own kids growing up. But will anyone remember watching it a week later? Probably not. It's the cinematic equivalent of plain oatmeal—nourishing, inoffensive, and completely unremarkable.





