A grown-up woman, who kept her childish instincts and behavior, starts working as a nanny of a 8-year-old girl, who actually acts like an adult. But in the end everything turns to its right places.

[last lines]
Ray: Every story has an end. But in life, every ending is just a new beginning.
Neal: When I'm not ready, you hunt me down. When I try and make it work, you're not interested.
Molly: Ever since we met, it's about what I'm doing wrong... but I'm not the one with the problem. You are, you and your selfishness. All you do is take. I've got nothing for you right now, so... maybe it's time to start thinking about someone other than yourself.
Ray: You can have your job back, you know.
Molly: I don't think so. You and I, we're gonna be friends. Okay?
Ray: Grownups never stay friends with kids.
Molly: I don't see any grownups around here.
Ray: I do.
Ray: I'm not going anywhere, especially with you.
Molly Gunn: Oh, yes you are. We are going to sit in giant teacups and spin round and round in circles until we puke.
Ray: Are you on crack?
Molly Gunn: We're gonna have fun.
Ray: Freestyle is for moronic little kids and hippie freaks.
Molly Gunn: It's fun.
Ray: Fundamentals are the building blocks of fun.
Lorraine Schleine: Fruit punch? Why don't you just drink cyanide? At least it's quick.
Molly Gunn: [Takes a big sip from her can] Damn!
[she throws it to the ground]
Molly Gunn: Excuse me, Thumbelina, but you're still a little underage to be clubbing, aren't you?
Ray: You're a little overage to be wearing a lampshade in your hair. Bright idea?
Ray: [of her mother] Do you see her anywhere? News flash: you're not gonna. Not unless you schedule an appointment, or hang around her bedroom door at 3 in the morning. In the meantime you're working for me.
Molly Gunn: Is that so?
Ray: Uh-huh.
Molly Gunn: News flash, Mussolini: I quit!
[slams the door, stops to watch as it swings back into the kitchen again... ]
Ray: Swinging door.
[swinging door hits Molly in the face]
[Molly is dancing in the park]
Ray: Act your age, not your shoe size.
[Ray is hitting a classmate and shouting]
Ray: Take it back.
Molly Gunn: What are you doing?
[Molly breaks the girls apart and takes Ray away]
Molly Gunn: Have you gone mad? There is never, ever an excuse for hitting another person. What is going on?
Ray: She was laughing at me because her "au pair" said that my new nanny was a slutbag whore.
[Molly goes at it with the au pair]
Ray: She always does this to me, she's not coming. Ow!
Roma Schleine: Well, if you would stop wiggling your ass, it wouldn't have fallen off in the first place.
[first lines]
Ray: [narration] Some fairy tales are true, most of there stories we make up to help us deal with real life; it all depends on your point of view, but here are the facts... there was once a princess, who lived in a castle, high above the streets of an enchanted kingdom. The king and queen were long gone but they left her with a treasure, that she would stay a princess forever. On the eve of her 22nd birthday a great celebration was planned...
Molly Gunn: The last time I saw my mom and dad, I was eight going on nine... eight years, six months, and three days... almost as old as you are. They were going on tour and leaving me behind for the first time, because they didn't want me missing any more school, and they came to my room to say goodbye and I wouldn't open the door, so they left. I fell asleep and then the next thing I know, my nanny was waking me up in the middle of the night telling me their plane had crashed.
Lorraine Schleine: You're lucky... that you were mad. See, when you're mad you don't miss people and if you stay mad, it's like you never knew them at all... that way you don't have to feel sucky about it... You were lucky...
Molly Gunn: I wasn't mad, I was confused... everyone was talking, talking, talking at me and I couldn't understand a word they were saying, and then their voices became a blur and soon I couldn't even recognize their faces; they were like these blobs and they started to grow fangs and their eyes became green and I knew I had to run away. So I packed my knapsack, got on the train, and looked up at the map and decided I wanted to live on Coney Island. I thought it would be... you know... a real island. That I thought I could hide there like Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Fin, but imagine my surprise... The teacups were the only ride they would let me on by myself, so I got on it and I started spinning around and 'round and 'round. But I feel like I am still there... spinning 'round and 'round and 'round... and the ride won't stop... You were right, Ray, I am scared. But you're scared too. You're scared as I am and I thought that maybe if we could go together...
Molly Gunn: [holding up a ballet costume] So, what do ya think?
Huey: What is it?
Molly Gunn: It's a tutu, silly...
Huey: For what? A midget?
Molly Gunn: No, it's for a little girl named Ray. Her year-end recital is coming up and the costumes are so boring, so I'd thought I'd surprise with something spectacular...
Molly Gunn: [of Ray's Mozart tape] This sounds like the soundtrack to something you'd slit your wrists to.
Molly Gunn: As my best friend, it is your duty not to lie to me.
Molly Gunn: Kid, have you ever been to a shrink?
Ray: Since I was three.
Molly Gunn: [of Neal] Look at the one-hit wonder that slut turned out to be...
Molly Gunn: You brought your own personal soap?
Ray: You want to pick up bacterial meningitis or polio, you go ahead and be my guest.
[pause]
Ray: Whatever diseases you're already carrying probably make those sound like a joke, anyway.
Neal: [singing] Na, na, na, na, na, na, na, sheets of Egyptian cot-ton.
Molly Gunn: [about her new, low-income apartment] It's got potential, huh?
Huey: As a detention cell for convicted felons, maybe.
Ray: [sarcastically] I think we got ourselves a Grammy!
Ray: When you work for me, you leave when I say you can leave!
Molly Gunn: For you information, I do no work for you. I am employed by you mother.
Ray: Oh yeah? Take a look around. Do you see her anywhere? News flash: you're not gonna. Unless you make an appointment with her assisstant or hang around her bedroom door at 3 o'clock in the morning. So in the meantime... you're working for me.
Molly Gunn: [of the bedridden man in the library] That's your dad?
Ray: Was. Now he's a vegtable. And soon he'll be nothing.
Molly Gunn: That's kinda harsh...
Ray: It's a harsh world.
Ingrid: Tibet is a country, Molly, not contact information. Why not add "Earth" in case someone needs to know where Tibet is? This is not a resumé!
Molly Gunn: [Shrugs] It shows I'm a people person.
Molly Gunn: [Having tea in Ray's room] You're supposed to put the cream in before the sugar.
Lorraine Schleine: I'm not having cream. I can't gain weight.
Ray: Are you still moping over that disgusting guy? Other people always let you down. Why don't you forget them and do something for yourself?
Molly Gunn: Like what?
Ray: I don't know. Something you're good at. And I don't mean shopping.
Molly Gunn: Maybe some of us aren't good at anything.
Ray: Every grown-up is good at something. Oh, my bad. I don't see any grown-ups around here.
Molly Gunn: What's so great about being a grown-up anyway? So I can turn out like you?
Ray: You're scared.
Ingrid: Oh, my God. This place is beyond its normal grotesque. It's post-nuclear.
Ingrid: [Reading Molly's resume] "Dear prospective employer, although I've had no previous employment, ever, the following is a partial but significant list of personal recommendations, including contact information. The Dalai Lama, Tibet?"
Neal: [Upon seeing Molly's pet pig] What on God's earth is that?
Molly Gunn: [Affectionately] Mu.
Neal: Don't you mean oink?
Molly Gunn: No, "Mu" means "pork" in Thai. He was going to be my curry diner one night in Bangkok, but we fell in love.
Ray: Other people always let you down. Why don't you forget them and do something for yourself?
Molly Gunn: Like what?
Ray: I don't know. Something you're good at.
[beat]
Ray: And I don't mean shopping.
Molly Gunn: Maybe some of us aren't good at anything.
Ray: Every grownup is good at something.
[pause]
Ray: My bad. I don't see any grownups around here.
Molly Gunn: What's so great about being a grownup anyway? So I can turn out like you?
Ray: You're scared.
Ray: [Continues] Sometimes when Mu hears people walking by outside the door, he gets this funny expression and runs into the bathroom, like he thinks they're coming to get him.
[beat]
Ray: That's how you look.
Ray: You're a spastic hyena.
Ray: When you work for me you leave when I say you can leave!
Molly Gunn: For you information I do no work for you. I am employed by you mother.
Ray: Oh yeah? Take a look around. Do you see her anywhere? News flash: you're not gonna. Unless you make an appointment with her assisstant or hang around her bedroom door at 3 o' clock in the morning. So in the meantime... your working for me.
Molly Gunn: [after a small spat with Ingrid about not being able to pay for lunch] Fine! I'll live off water and sunshine!
Ray: I know you have trouble reading something as simple as a sign on the door, Gooey Huey. So let me help you. This is the *ladies'* room.
[makes LADIES sign in the air with her hand]
Molly Gunn: [When seeing Ray's room for the first time] This is your room?
Ray: [Sarcastic] There's no fooling you, is there?
Molly Gunn: It's so...
[pauses to look at the perfectly organized space]
Molly Gunn: orderly.
Neal: We have to talk.
Molly Gunn: Those are the four most hateful words in English.
Ray: It's a harsh world.
Molly Gunn: [of Neal's music video] This is so 80's it makes my hair poof.
Molly Gunn: Rise and shine, Ophelia.
Molly Gunn: That's your dad?
Ray: Was. Now he's a vegtable. And soon he'll be nothing.
Ray: Why are you buttering a plastic scone?
Molly Gunn: Why are there plastic scones when we have real food on the table? Huh?
Lorraine Schleine: [to Molly, about eating hamburgers] I'm not the one who's gonna get mad cow disease and go nuts, though you don't seem to have a brain to fry in the first place.
Molly Gunn: [Outside Neal's apartment] I was just out shopping in the neighborhood.
Neal: At midnight?
Molly Gunn: It's the city that never sleeps!
Molly Gunn: Give me five more minutes baby, and I'll rock your world!
Molly Gunn: Isn't doing the dishes what the maid is supposed to be for?
Lorraine Schleine: She doesn't know how to dry without leaving spots.
Molly Gunn: You don't know how to dry without destroying the environment! For every roll of paper towels you waste, a tree in the rain forest dies.
Lorraine Schleine: I'm gonna die of botulism from the germs on that gunky towel, you tree-loving hippie.
Neal: Molly, I came here to see you.
Molly: For what?
Neal: I haven't been able to write a single decent song since we last saw each other. Molly, I'm sorry. I was trying to take a step forward, but I took two steps backward instead.
Molly: Why don't you take one step sideways? Then we can stop doing this silly little dance.
Molly Gunn: Got a girl, Tony?
[tosses a pair of skimpy underwear at him]
Limo Driver: Not one that could fit into this dental floss.
Ray: If you refuse to have a nice time with me, I'm going to have fun by myself.
Molly Gunn: I'm so sorry, Mrs Schleine.
Roma Schleine: Thank you for coming, Miss Gunn.
Molly Gunn: Are you kidding? Nothing could keep me away at a time like this.
Roma Schleine: [she places a check in front of Molly] Last week's pay and a month's severance.
Molly Gunn: Severance?
Roma Schleine: We're letting you go.
Molly Gunn: We?
Roma Schleine: That's right. Me and Ray. We. Goodnight, Miss Gunn.
Molly Gunn: I'm sorry, but I'm not leaving without an explanation.
Roma Schleine: I don't know what's been going on between you and my daughter, but she has made it clear that she never wants to see you again.
Molly Gunn: She must be going out of her mind with grief.
Roma Schleine: Actually, she's taking it rather well. I was at my staff meeting when I got the news about my husband. I came home to find Ray doing her homework. She's been very calm and level-headed about this whole affair.
Molly Gunn: You call that taking it well? Do you know what etage your daughter's at in ballet? Or that she was banned from her science class for stealing a formaldehyde pig so she could give it a proper burial? The tea set you got her... it's exquisite and beautiful, but do you know how she likes to have her tea, how many lumps... one,two... cream,sugar?
Roma Schleine: And the point of your little tirade is...
Molly Gunn: You're right. You don't know what goes on between me and Ray because you don't know very much about your own daughter.
Roma Schleine: I know my daughter well enough to respect her wishes.
Molly Gunn: You don't give her respect. You give her whatever she asks for so you don't have to deal wit her. She's eight years old. She is not twenty-eight. Please remember that the next time you show her some respect.
[storms out]
Ingrid: Who pays your bills?
Molly Gunn: [Waves hand dismissively] Bob.
Ingrid: Bob who?
Molly Gunn: I don't know. My parents' guy Bob.
Neal: I'm sorry, I was trying to take a step forward, but I took two steps backward instead.
Molly Gunn: Why don't you take one step sideways? Then we can stop doing this little dance. Okay?
Molly Gunn: Kid, have you ever been to a shrink?
Lorraine Schleine: Since I was three.