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Milwaukee's Daily Magazine Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2008
Today
Hi: 62
Lo: 45
Wed
Hi: 58
Lo: 46
Thu
Hi: 57
Lo: 41
Bee Movie
Opens Nov. 2, 2007. Run time: 1 hr. 30 min.

for mild suggestive humor

A recent college graduate, Barry B. Benson wants more out of life than the inevitable career that awaits him and every other worker in New Hive City--a job at Honex making honey. Barry jumps at the chance to venture out of the hive, and soon encounters a world beyond his wildest dreams. When Barry inadvertently meets a quirky florist named Vanessa, he breaks one of the cardinal rules of beedom--he talks to her. A friendship soon develops, and Barry gets a guided crash course in the ways of the human race.

When he shockingly discovers that anyone can purchase honey right off the grocery store shelf, he realizes that his true calling is to stop this injustice and set the world right by suing the human race for stealing the bees' precious honey.




OnMilwaukee.com rating:

Cast: Jerry Seinfeld, Renee Zellweger, Matthew Broderick, John Goodman, Chris Rock
Director: Simon J. Smith, Steve Hickner
Written by: Spike Feresten, Barry Marder, Andy Robin, Jerry Seinfeld
Producer: Jerry Seinfeld, Christina Steinberg
Genres: Animation, Comedy

Oct. 15, 2008
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Critic review:

Of all the different hats Jerry Seinfeld wears for Bee Movie, none seems to fit quite right. But the movie is still decent, albeit somewhat generic, fun for the kiddies. Story Unlike a certain star/co-writer/producer's namesake sitcom, Bee Movie is not about nothing. When we first meet Barry B. Benson (voice of Jerry Seinfeld), he is about to graduate to a full-blown honey-making bumblebee—class of 9:15! But he soon learns that the nectar of bees' labor isn't doing all the good he'd always imagined.

For his first venture out of the hive, Barry hitches a ride with the "pollen jocks" to do some work on a sunflower. Entranced by what he thinks is a flower, Barry buzzes his way down and grabs hold—only to discover that it is a tennis ball, to which he is now stuck. After being catapulted to freedom from the ball's fuzz and ricocheting throughout all of Manhattan, he winds up in an apartment belonging to Vanessa (voice of Renee Zellweger) and her boyfriend Ken (voice of Patrick Warburton). Vanessa saves Barry from Ken's wrath, which leads to a long-lasting friendship between them, even though Barry committed the sin of talking to a human. However, Barry's eyes become wide open to her fellow humans' frivolous extraction and usage of honey and vows to sue humankind—and he wins.

But the victory becomes bittersweet and a hard-learned lesson for Barry on how honey, in a way, makes the world go 'round. Acting Man, this Seinfeld guy really has some friends in high places! Seemingly his whole Hollywood Rolodex laid down some vocals for Bee Movie, even though you'll only recognize the ones who ''play'' themselves—and, of course, Chris Rock. The comic and Seinfeld crony, whose high voice and energy are perfect for animation, is probably the best of the bunch, playing a mosquito in peril named Mooseblood. But the A-list voices don't end there: Matthew Broderick, Oprah, Larry Miller, Megan Mullally, Rip Torn and Michael Richards are among the heard but not seen, while Sting, Ray Liotta and Larry King hilariously poke fun at their flesh-and-blood selves. Seinfeld himself, however, is often hit-or-miss as the animated protagonist.

He's funniest when going on a somewhat tangential rant, as Barry tends to do, but delivering straight lines and tangibility his target audience can relate to are a bit of a stretch. Zellweger's acting style, while great in live action, is even less fit for animation. As Barry's friend with hints of bee-human romance, she is rather bland and even seems out of sync at times with her character's expressions. Direction Perhaps we've just been spoiled by the Ratatouilles of the animated-film world, but Bee Movie has nothing on the field's leaders. You'd expect a little something more from Seinfeld, who co-wrote (with Spike Feresten, Barry Marder and Andy Robin), produced and altogether shepherded Bee—maybe a "What's the deal with…?" nod to his stand-up faithful, or more making-a-fuss-over-nothing rants, or just overall edgier comedy—but he goes straight for the tyke demographic and his style doesn't quite seem to be on children's wavelength.

It's often funny, with occasionally sharp jibes on the animal kingdom (is there any other kind of premise for an animated movie these days?), but rarely witty. And when the movie takes a Happy Feet-like preachy twist towards the end, it'll be too sappy-sweet for even the ones in your lap. Visually, directors Steve Hickner and Simon Smith's movie doesn't really approach Pixar's work, but they make up for it with fun rollercoaster routes through the skies and skyscrapers of Manhattan. All in all, Bee Movie's large team of writers and directors scrape together enough for kids to enjoy, but kids these days have come to expect more than just "enough" from their animated movies. Bottom Line Hollywood.com rated this film 2 1/2 stars.-Brian Marder.

Trailer not available.


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