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| DVD - Wide Screen | $12.74 |
Closed Caption; Making of Akeelah and the Bee; Two Peas in a Pod; Inside the Mind of Akeelah; Keke Palmer "All My Girlz" music video; Gag reel; Deleted scenes; 4x3 full screen version; 5.1 and 2.0 Dolby Digital audio; English and Spanish subtitles
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Akeelah and the Bee [P&S]
1. Introduction [3:25]
2. ESPN [5:10]
3. School Spelling Bee [4:27]
4. Do It for Dad [3:48]
5. Dr. Larabee [3:40]
6. District Spelling Bee [7:14]
7. Caught Cheating [4:19]
8. Woodland Hills [5:57]
9. I Need a Coach [4:05]
10. Javier's Birthday Party [5:01]
11. Words to Change the World [4:21]
12. I'm Not in the Mood [3:51]
13. Regional Spelling Bee [7:06]
14. Being Honored [5:25]
15. It's So Hard [2:45]
16. 50,000 Coaches [5:18]
17. Denise [4:52]
18. Off to D.C. [3:43]
19. Scripps National Spelling Bee [4:12]
20. Eliminations [4:57]
21. Break Time [2:47]
22. Xanthosis [3:54]
23. Head to Head [5:12]
24. Credits [7:09]
A sober, heartwarming, and inspirational drama, Akeelah and the Bee employs intelligent writing and unusually sensitive performances, especially from young African-American actress Keke Palmer in the title role. Eleven-year-old Akeelah Anderson, who lives in south central Los Angeles with her working mother (Angela Bassett), is an extremely bright girl whose grades are slipping due to unwelcome, outside influences. To get her back on track, the school principal has her enter the national spelling bee. Akeelah's coach for the event is Dr. Joshua Larabee (Laurence Fishburne), a college professor on a leave of absence following the death of his daughter. Writer-director Doug Atchison draws his characters sharply, giving clearly definable traits to each but leaving a certain amount of room for interpretation by the actors, who rise to the challenge magnificently. Larabee keenly understands that Akeelah's love for words links her to the father she lost as a small girl, and she realizes on some level that she has become a surrogate for the daughter Larabee lost. Fishburne's demonstrative passion is perfectly balanced by Palmer's quiet strength, and their scenes together are pure, unadulterated movie magic. The climactic spelling bee doesn't unfold along predictable lines, and it demonstrates that Akeelah has learned things she can't get out of a dictionary or thesaurus. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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