Alison is the mother of three children, where she decided to spend the night relaxing by going out for dinner with her friends Isie and Sundra. On the side of her brother, Shawn takes care of the children at home. The dinner party was canceled, as the three women began to face Brigitte's sister-in-law, Brigitte. The three friends decided to help Brigitte find her missing Phoenix child. In the end, Allison realizes that simple happiness is a mother who cherishes her life alongside her husband and her life.
What ensues is frenetic and never as funny as it should be because directing brothers Andrew and Jon Erwin are not skilled enough at pacing the action and varying the volume.
Some of these plot twists require more than the normal suspension of logic that often happens in similar comedies. Yet the characters are all appealing.
Seldom has wackiness been as tedious as it is in "Moms' Night Out," a Christian-themed film that is desperate to make adherents seem wild and crazy but mostly makes them seem incapable of raising children.
If the concept of a moms' night out is premised on the notion that mothers can never get away for fear their families will collapse in their absence, then this movie cruelly confirms that fear.