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    The Secret Life of Bees

    The Secret Life of BeesDirector: Gina Prince-Bythewood
    Actors: Dakota Fanning, Jennifer Hudson, Queen Latifah, Alicia Keys, Sophie Okonedo
    Studio: 20th Century Fox
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $19.98
    Buy Used: $1.62
    as of 2/10/2010 03:11 EST details
    You Save: $18.36 (92%)



    New (45) Used (47) Collectible (1) from $1.62

    Seller: media-savvy
    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 123 reviews
    Sales Rank: 618

    Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed)
    Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
    Region: 1
    Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
    Number Of Discs: 1
    Running Time: 110 Minutes
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
    Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

    MPN: 2255632
    UPC: 024543556329
    EAN: 0024543556329
    ASIN: B001NLJ3NU

    Theatrical Release Date: 2008
    Release Date: February 3, 2009
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    Headed by an all-star cast of women, The Secret Life of Bees is the heartwarming and well-told story of a young girl who finds love and acceptance from a trio of independent sisters. The Secret Life of Bees is based on the bestselling book of the same name by Sue Monk Kidd and centers around the plight of 14-year-old Lily (Dakota Fanning). Assuming the burden for her mother's premature death, she has a precarious relationship with her abusive father T. Ray (Paul Bettany). Lily's only friend is her caregiver Rosaleen (Academy Award winner Jennifer Hudson). Set in South Carolina in 1964, when civil rights wasn't a given, Rosaleen's life is threatened by racists who'd just as soon see her dead than exercise her right to vote. Lily runs away with her to a town she believes may hold the secrets of her mother's life. There the pair meet the Boatwright sisters August (Queen Latifah), June (Alicia Keys) and May (Sophie Okonedo)--who produce the area's famous Black Madonna honey. They eventually provide Lily with the unconditional love she never felt she had and also show Rosaleen that being a black woman in the South doesn't mean she can't have a sense of worth. The Secret Life of Bees doesn't try to pass itself off as a historical documentation of race relations in the 1960s. But the fictional slice of life still resonates because of the feelings of injustice that it stirs up. Though the film is written to show the disparity between blacks and whites, there is always a strong sense of hope, thanks to the lead actresses who bring empathy and dignity to their roles. Hudson exhibits some of the same quiet grace that Regina Taylor brought to her role as the family housekeeper in the superb TV series I'll Fly Away. Latifah has the part of wise matriarch down pat, even when she's playing a sister rather than a mother. And it's clear that Fanning is making a seamless transition from kid to young adult roles. Whether she's giving an impassioned monologue or listening thoughtfully, Fanning brings nuance and intelligence to her role. --Jae-Ha Kim



    Stills from The Secret Life of Bees (Click for larger image)





    Product Description
    SET IN SOUTH CAROLINA IN 1964, IS THE MOVING TALE OF LILY OWENS (FANNING) A 14 YEAR-OLD GIRL WHO IS HAUNTED BY THE MEMORY OF HER LATE MOTHER (BURTON).


    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 123
    1 2 3 4 5 6 ...25Next »



    5 out of 5 stars This one pulls at your heart strings   January 2, 2009
    Leslie Bethany (D'iberville, MS)
    28 out of 32 found this review helpful

    This is the best movie I have seen in a long time. I think I had tears in my eyes through 75% of the movie. This is Dakota Fanning's best performance. Jennifer Hudson was spectacular. Queen Latifah delivered like never before. Everyone was amazing in this film. Don't waste your time renting this one because it's one to own. You really connect with the characters and the issues at hand. This is a must see movie.


    5 out of 5 stars heatwarming   January 18, 2009
    Daren N. Heaton (Laie, HI United States)
    18 out of 20 found this review helpful

    Excellent movie. Almost perfect version of the book. I was expecting a PG though but still it's a great movie. For me one of the best movies of 2008.


    5 out of 5 stars Best movie of 2008!!   January 2, 2009
    K. Conroy (USA)
    21 out of 24 found this review helpful

    I thought this was the best movie of 2008! It was SO GOOD! Granted I had some movies that I went to and watched over and over again, this one I only watched once but once I watched it I knew it would be a timeless classic. Don't rent this movie! Just buy it! It's SO GOOD!


    4 out of 5 stars Sweet in the Mouth   October 18, 2008
    Xavier Thelakkatt (Rush City, MN United States)
    11 out of 12 found this review helpful

    Two of us went to this movie last night. It was the first show on the release day and there were only six others in the whole movie theater. However, that fact was not indicative of the movie's worth.

    It was a very moving, yet joyful movie, set in the backdrop of racial tensions and violence of 1964 in South Carolina. Fourteen year old Lily (Dakota Fanning) flees her abusive father along with her caregiver Rosaleen (Jennifer Hudson) who is battered for claiming her rights as a colored woman. Lily is also fleeing from her fussy and haunting memories of accidentally shooting her mother to death, during an abusive tussle between the couple. Guided by a honey bottle label they reach the Boatwright sisters. August (Queen Latifah) the oldest among the Boatwrights welcomes the fugitives. They put them to work in the mesmerizing world of bee keeping. Lily grows in loving admiration for the maternal figure of August and learns more about her own mother and her deep love for Lily.

    Dakota Fanning does a superb job of portraying the abused, at the same time, assertive Lily of fourteen years. All the other cast members do justice to their roles, though Queen Latifah, as a caring maternal figure to Lily and queen of the Boatwright beehive, is less convincing. Overall, the movie tastes sweet in the mouth, but leaves a lump in the throat. It's sure to appeal more to female audiences. Apparently that's what the ad is calling for: "Bring your girlfriends, sisters, mothers and daughters."



    4 out of 5 stars 5 outstanding performances in this warm-hearted, life-affirming film.   October 19, 2008
    RMurray847 (Albuquerque, NM United States)
    9 out of 10 found this review helpful

    I read THE SECRET LIFE OF BEES by Sue Monk Kidd about two years ago. I enjoyed the book very much because it nicely evoked a sense of place (the rural south, with its humidity, ramshackle houses, lush flora and fauna) and it also created very vivid characters. It also suffered from a couple of unlikely coincidences and sometimes a bit too much sentimentality. It didn't trust the power it had built up to successfully tug at our heartstrings and evoke tears without just a little bit of extra obvious manipulation. I found it brisk, involving reading but a little short of classic status.

    The film is almost exactly the same. While I don't remember tiny details of the book, and thus no doubt there are some "key" scenes missing, the film is very faithful to the plot of the book and its characters. It captures both the strengths and weaknesses of the book quite well. Frankly, if you like (or love) the book, then you should be quite content with how it has been translated. If you are unfamiliar with the book, you should have some of the same reactions to the film as I described about the book above.

    The story is set in 1964. 14-year-old Lily Owens (Dakota Fanning) is a mature beyond her years girl in South Carolina. She carries a heavy burden. Ten years previously, while watching a fight between her mother and her abusive father, she accidentally fired a gun. The bullet killed her mother. Her mother, who was in the process of leaving her father and also, she fears, leaving her. This has left a hole in Lily, because she's torn between her fantasies of a loving mother that she has killed and a her fears that her mother was about to abandon her to her awful father. Lily's housekeeper Rosaleen (Jennifer Hudson) is somewhat friendly with the smart, inquisitive Lily (a girl who loves to write in her journal) and one day the two are walking somewhat companionably to town. Lily needs to stop by the store...Rosaleen is on her way to register to vote now that President Johnson has signed the Civil Rights Act. The redneck bigots in town figure out Rosaleen's intentions, and a confrontation ensures in which Rosaleen insults the men and they, in turn, attack her.

    Lily seizes on the opportunity to rescue Rosaleen from the hospital, where she is recovering prior to her imprisonment. Lily takes Rosaleen to the town of Tiburon, SC...the only clue she has to where her mother might have come from. With little money and only a vague notion of her approach, the two runaways are taken in by a family of sisters who run a honey harvesting operation. It is amongst these women that Lily (and Rosaleen) learn some important lessons about life, learn to feel a sense of belonging, and ultimately, perhaps for Lily, learn about the fate of loved ones.

    There are three Boatwright sisters: August (Queen Latifah) the eldest, who runs the business and dispenses worldly advice and tough love in that way only Queen Latifah can. There is June (Alicia Keys) the stern music-teacher who has put up a pretty heavy emotional armor. She's clearly enamored of her boyfriend Neil, a fellow teacher, but refuses to fully release herself to him. Finally, there is May (Sophie Okonedo), who is the most warm-hearted, kind person you'd care to meet, but she is also tormented by inner demons. I don't want to give away too much about May, because discovering the truth behind her afflictions is one of the joys of the story.

    Suffice it to say that the film takes these characters and first shows how the civil rights movement affects them. Lily learns firsthand some harsh lessons about hatred. But it is far, far more interested in showing us how these women (and the men who buzz around them) grow and change...but also how strength takes on many different aspects, and how these different forms of strength can help others with their weaknesses and fears.

    It's a brightly lit movie. It practically beams...much as Queen Latifah spends so much time beaming. It's full of metaphors (many dealing with bees, of course)...and sometimes it is just a bit heavy-handed. August Boatwright is sometimes just a little TOO wise and understanding. Lily is sometimes just a smidge to precocious. June is sometimes a little TOO hardened. And unfortunately, the ending is just a little too pat and convenient. In "real life," this story would have played out with more mess and more collateral damage.

    Yet it's still so nice to see a movie that wants to embrace you with good feelings...realism be damned. Come enjoy these lively women, it says. Get swept up in their characters. That's what the book wanted to do, and that's what the film does.

    This is accomplished mostly by virtue of some really, really nice performances. Queen Latifah, in many ways, fares the worst, because this is a character that was almost written to be played by her. We see her doing very little that is new for her...but she's so good at this character that we draw some comfort from the familiarity. She does have one devastating scene involving another of her sisters that shows she is ready to take another step as an actress. Alicia Keys looks lovely and gives a focused performance...more than anyone, her character seems to belong squarely in 1964...from her clothes to her attitude. Jennifer Hudson is fine as Rosaleen...it's no longer a curiosity that this former American Idol can act...she can and should. Her character somewhat falls by the wayside in the 2nd half of the film...but in our glimpses of her, we still see how she has grown and changed. Sophie Okonedo, who was so good in HOTEL RWANDA, is fabulous here. When she is on screen, she just bursts with life and energy and you simply can't take your eyes off of her. Whether her eyes are sparkling with loving mischief, or glazing over in dismay...she fully invests herself in the work.

    Finally, I'm happy to say that Dakota Fanning is still reliably good. I would say she's going to make the transition from child star to teen star with little effort. She's the real deal as an actress.

    THE SECRET LIFE OF BEES may not win major awards or become a much-beloved classic...but it IS an outstandingly evocative film that is so well acted. I'd recommend it for anyone willing to spend time with some really interesting women...AND I'd recommend it to audiences aged 13 and above. I think that young teen girls, in particular, might take a special liking to the film.


    Showing reviews 1-5 of 123
    1 2 3 4 5 6 ...25Next »


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