The movie's great achievement is that it captures a broad cross-section of America
Spellbound (2003)
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Reviews Counted:134
Fresh:131
Rotten:3
Average Rating:8.2/10
Consensus: A suspenseful, gripping documentary that features an engaging cross section of American children.
Theatrical Release:Apr 30, 2003 Limited
Box Office: $5,530,123
Synopsis: Jeff Blitz's Academy Award-nominated documentary is an affecting, inspiring look at eight American children as they make their way to compete in the 1999 National Spelling Bee in Washington D.C.... Jeff Blitz's Academy Award-nominated documentary is an affecting, inspiring look at eight American children as they make their way to compete in the 1999 National Spelling Bee in Washington D.C. Defying all stereotypes and categorizations, the spellers that Blitz chooses to focus on run the ethnic and socioeconomic gamut. Emily is from wealthy New Haven, Connecticut, while April, the daughter of a bar owner from Pennsylvania, spends her summers studying. Harry is an intense, quick-witted boy from New Jersey, while Ashley is the African-American daughter of a single Washington, D.C. mother. Gifted Florida resident Nupur is the daughter of Indian parents while Ted hails from a small Missouri town where physical prowess is prized over mental ability. The daughter of Mexican immigrant parents, driven Angela comes from Texas, and Neil is a well-prepared East Indian boy from the wealthy California coast. Blitz provides several minutes at home with each child before we accompany them to the National Bee, where we are swiftly reminded that only one of them has a shot at winning. As engrossing and emotional as the best fiction, one comes away from SPELLBOUND with the feeling that--whether victorious or not--the children whose tales it tells are walking into limitless futures. [More]
Director: Jeffrey Blitz
Director: Jeffrey Blitz
Producer: Sean Welch
Studio: ThinkFilm
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Reviews for Spellbound
Blitz films the competitions in a way that keeps us gasping for breath; this is a jumble of comedy, drama and severe edge-of-seat suspense from the first to the last word.
My favorite contestant, April DeGideo, wears glasses and a perpetually serious expression, even when describing her oblivious parents as Archie and Edith Bunker.
It's exciting to watch the young students vie for top honors, spelling words like logorrhea, and you can be assured these kids are as competitive as any school basketball player.
When a child stands at the microphone and frantically writes invisible letters on her hand, we can't help but love each and every one of these people.
A genuinely charming and often funny documentary about the high-pressured world of competitive spelling.
“Spellbound” is unembellished, textbook documentary filmmaking that chronicles the lives of eight typical kids vying for honors in the NSB and who happen to know how to spell “logorrhea.”
Gripping and fascinating work by first-time filmmaker Jeffrey Blitz. Bravo!
Offers an entertaining and engrossing exploration of the aspirations and anxieties of American preteens.
Whatever else it may be, this is also a film about being young, hopeful and focused.
The best documentary you'll see this year, as thrilling a competition as any Super Bowl and as suspenseful a story as any Hitchcock film.
It's all sharply captured to the letter in a new, captivating documentary. To spell it out, Spellbound is G-R-E-A-T.
An absorbing film that will send you home with a real affection for these kids...emerges as a champion in its own right.
This wonderful documentary grabs you from the first scene with its riveting profiles of these unusual children.
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