... it's easy to overlook that contrivance, because the movie's heart is so clearly in the right place.
Akeelah and the Bee (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:27
Fresh:22
Rotten:5
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: Although predictable in every way, a winning performance from its young star Keke Palmer and the rest of the cast makes it difficult not to cheer for the little heroine of Akeelah and the Bee. Sort of like Rocky for the middle school nerd set, Akeelah is a warm, family-friendly underdog story, featuring terrific supporting performances from Laurence Fishburne and Angela Bassett.
Theatrical Release:Apr 28, 2006 Wide
Box Office: $18,811,135
Synopsis: Following in the fine tradition of inspiring inner-city underdog tales like STAND AND DELIVER, and TAKE THE LEAD, Doug Atchison's AKEELAH AND THE BEE is a story of overcoming odds that never... Following in the fine tradition of inspiring inner-city underdog tales like STAND AND DELIVER, and TAKE THE LEAD, Doug Atchison's AKEELAH AND THE BEE is a story of overcoming odds that never descends into empty formula. The narrative centers around the character of Akeelah (Keke Palmer, in a star-making performance), a charming yet insecure 11 year old girl from Los Angeles' gang-ridden South Central district. Upon flipping channels after school one day, she lands on ESPN's coverage of the National Spelling Bee. Having recently become aware of her innate talent in this area, Akeelah cannot help but fantasize about the prospect of being a star of the bee circuit. The tragic problem -- intelligence of this kind is not valued in her community, where skills of athleticism and rapping are coveted far more than school smarts. Though Akeelah attempts to hide her academic acuity behind a rebellious attitude, she cannot resist the temptation to enter her school's spelling bee, at which her stellar performance attracts the attention of her idealistic principal, who pairs her with a mentor, a former professor named Joshua Larabee (the always riveting Laurence Fishburne, who re-embodies the wise iconoclast character he played so well in the chess movie SEARCHING FOR BOBBY FISCHER). Meanwhile, Akeelah's strong, practical mother, (played by Angela Bassett, who worked with Fishburne on the Tina Turner biopic WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT?) while always supportive of her talented daughter, does not necessarily see the point of spending such time and energy on what will likely amount to a fleeting hobby. Perhaps taking its cue from the surprising popularity of Jeffrey Blitz's quirky documentary SPELLBOUND (2002), which explored spelling prodigies from diverse classes, races, and geographic locations, this drama makes what could be a narrow niche into a universal tale of triumph over adversity. [More]
Starring: Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne, Curtis Armstrong, Sean Michael
Starring: Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne, Curtis Armstrong, Sean Michael, Lee Thompson Young, Keke Palmer, Jumper Lark, Sahara Garey, J.R. Villareal, Tzi Ma, Eddie Steeples, Erica Hubbard, Julito McCullum
Director: Doug Atchison
Director: Doug Atchison
Screenwriter: Doug Atchison
Producer: Laurence Fishburne, Sidney Ganis, Michael Paseornek, Dalia Phillips, Nancy Hult, Daniel Llewellyn, Michael Romersa
Composer: Aaron Zigman
Studio: Lions Gate Films
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Reviews for Akeelah and the Bee
The latest spelling bee movie is a Starbucks Entertainment product, and it has a made-to-order feel about it, kind of like a compilation album.
It's the kind of movie parents will want their kids to see as opposed to much of what's playing at the multiplex.
Akeelah and the Bee won a screenplay contest a few years ago, and it reads as if its writer studied too many screenplays first.
Akeelah and the Bee is so warm and well-meaning that you may find yourself wanting to like it more than you really do.
... Palmer -- and J.J. Villarreal, as her unflappable fellow contestant and first-blush romantic interest -- makes it all go down very easily.
Akeelah and the Bee is not short on inspiration, emotion and uplift, but would go down better without all the refined sugar.
The plot of Akeelah and the Bee may feel a trifle familiar, but here's the surprise: This is one time when familiarity doesn't breed contempt.
Akeelah and the Bee carefully diagrams every cliche we've absorbed from sports movies, urban dramas, mentor flicks and precocious-children portraits. Yet it works.
Producers, including Mark Cuban and Starbucks, should be commended for putting their money behind a film that, like Akeelah herself, dares to be different.
If Akeelah and the Bee is a generic, well-oiled commercial contraption, it is the first to credibly dramatize the plight of a truly gifted, poor black child.
The story of Akeelah's ascent to the finals of the National Spelling Bee makes an uncommonly good movie, entertaining and actually inspirational, and with a few tears along the way.
It's a successful feel-good movie, but it would make you feel even better if it didn't push quite so hard for its desired effects.
Sure it takes place in the geeky world of spelling bees, but Akeelah has the same old-fashioned, feel-good, against-the-odds qualities as Rocky.
... this by turns funny, affecting tale pays homage not just to one young person's determination and character but to all those parents, teachers and myriad guardian angels who in real life instill young people with the love of language ...
Where Spellbound generated crackling suspense in its competition climax, Akeelah is virtually suspense-free, even with an attempt to wring a twist on its pre-determined outcome.
An old-fashioned but thoroughly good-hearted tale of academics, achievement and uplift ...
Even though their movie is more like Akeelah and the B-Plus, Fishburne, Bassett and Palmer spell quality.
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