 (L to R) Anjelica Huston plays the headmistress of the Chapman Academy at which Charlie (Eddie Murphy) and Kim (Regina King) hope to enroll their son Ben (Khamani Griffin)
|  (Top - L to R) Marvin (Steve Zahn), Phil (Jeff Garlin) and Charlie (Eddie Murphy) run a day care facility
|  (Top - l to r) Phil (Jeff Garlin), Charlie (Eddie Murphy) and Marvin (Steve Zahn) learn that taking care of kids can be a dirty job, but somebody's gotta do it
|
|
 Jeff Garlin, center, stars as Phil, who teams up with his former co-worker to open up a child-care facility
|  Eddie Murphy and Jeff Garlin in Columbia's Daddy Day Care
|  Eddie Murphy and Khamani Griffin, right, play father and son
|
 Eddie Murphy, left, plays an out of work dad who agrees to mind his son (Khamani Griffin, center), so his wife (Regina King) can return to work
|  Steve Zahn plays Marvin, an overgrown kid who is hired to help as the number of kids increases at the child-care facility
|  A harsh headmistress played by Anjelica Huston, left, tries to sabotage a rival day care facility with the help of her assistant, played by Lacey Chabert
|
 An out of work advertising executive, played by Eddie Murphy, slowly adjusts to running a child care facility
|  An out of work advertising executive, played by Eddie Murphy, slowly gets the hang of running a child care facility
|  An out of work advertising executive, played by Eddie Murphy, slowly gets the hang of running a child care facility
|
 Ben (Khamani Griffin, left) and his father Charlie (Eddie Murphy) enjoy time together
|  Ben (Khamani Griffin, left) has a conversation with his father (Eddie Murphy)
|  Charlie (Eddie Murphy, top left), an out of work advertising executive, has his hands full when he decides to open a child care facility
|
 Columbia's Daddy Day Care
|  Columbia's Daddy Day Care
|  Nicky (Arthur Young, left) signs up for Charlie (Eddie Murphy, center) and Phil's (Jeff Garlin) day care facility
|
 Phil (Jeff Garlin, left) and Charlie (Eddie Murphy) dress up as vegetables to amuse their child-care charges
|  The kids are all right, but not necessarily the grownups as two out of work advertising executives played by Eddie Murphy, left, and Jeff Garlin decide to go into the child care business
|
|