Fine directors Scott McGehee and David Siegel (The Deep End) take a detour into mumbo jumbo.
Bee Season (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:31
Fresh:11
Rotten:20
Average Rating:5/10
Consensus: Bee Season is an intelligent, but frustratingly distant and diffuse drama about family dysfunction.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for thematic elements, a scene of sensuality and brief strong language.
Runtime: 1 hr 44 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Nov 11, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $1,141,752
Synopsis: Based on the bestselling novel by Myla Goldberg, BEE SEASON follows a family of seekers, each of whom is looking to God, transcendence, or love, in their search for something greater than... Based on the bestselling novel by Myla Goldberg, BEE SEASON follows a family of seekers, each of whom is looking to God, transcendence, or love, in their search for something greater than themselves. Eleven-year-old Eliza Nauman (Flora Cross in a promising debut) is on her way to becoming the national spelling bee champion, much to the delight of her heretofore somewhat dismissive father, Saul (Richard Gere). A professor of religion who wrote his thesis on Jewish mysticism, Saul has previously shown more interest in Eliza's older brother, Aaron (Max Minghella), a serious-minded young scholar and cello player. In what soon becomes clear is his customary manner, Saul takes control of Eliza's spelling career, and focuses on her to the exclusion of the rest of his family. Meanwhile, his wife, Miriam (Juliette Binoche), is quietly facing a spiritual crisis, and unbeknownst to her family is engaging in petty thievery in her quest for beauty and salvation. Saul is unwilling to admit that anything is wrong-and thus out of his control-while the unmoored Aaron turns to the beatific Chali (Kate Bosworth), a hare Krishna, for spiritual sustenance and comfort. As Saul attempts to tap Eliza's uncanny knack with words and create a pipeline to God according to the tenets of an ancient Kabbalah scholar, Eliza blames herself for everyone's troubles. As the final competition draws nigh and the family disintegrates, however, it might just be that Eliza is the only one who can save them. [More]
Starring: Richard Gere, Juliette Binoche, Kate Bosworth
Starring: Richard Gere, Juliette Binoche, Kate Bosworth
Director: Scott McGehee
Director: Scott McGehee
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
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Reviews for Bee Season
There's no shortage of material on the screen in Bee Season -- it's just not assembled in a satisfying manner.
Co-directors Scott McGehee and David Siegel, whose visual schemes lent a hypnotic aura to their previous collaborations ... don't find the right balance of story and image this time.
The film succeeds, because both the tale and the young performers (Cross and Max Minghella as Eliza's teenage brother, Aaron) are so compelling.
Tempts with a bit of a buzz, but then can't deliver and becomes more than a bit silly and self-admiring.
Though Bee Season has flaws beyond Gere's casting, it compels us to look at the things that words and lives are made of, which is no abstract achievement.
Reflecting Goldberg's virtuoso novel, the film sets up rich dichotomies of what people say and do, and of satisfying the self vs. pleasing the community.
Over the years this actor has become a beguiling silver fox, trickier than he seems, but [Gere] still doesn't have the psychic weight to pull off a role like Saul.
One of the most unusual portraits of spiritual striving you're likely to see. And for that alone, it's worth your attention.
The lack of emotion is a bit off-putting at first, but as the story unfolds, we grow to appreciate that the film's detached tone reflects the family dynamics.
The intellectual grist is intriguing, but one can't escape the feeling that Bee Season is only skimming the surface of its source material.
So intent is the film on finding symbols and magic in anything and everything, it forgets that flesh-and-blood humans are waiting on screen and off for something to really care about.
While directed with intelligence and visual flair by Scott McGehee and David Siegel, Bee Season ultimately is undone by the same trait that makes young spelling whizzes insufferable.
Bee Season can spell strongylid but it doesn't know the definition of tension.
I don't know whether Gere, an avowed Buddhist, took this role to embarrass kabbala faddists like Madonna and Ashton Kutcher, or to see if he could pass for Jewish -- and a scholar! It's a lost cause, in any case.
Though bathed in ecclesiastical light and a work of obvious craft and ambition, Bee Season is grimly serious and rather full of itself.
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