Product Description: Bee Movie is a comedy that will change everything you think you know about bees. Having just graduated from college a bee by the name of Barry B. Benson (Jerry Seinfeld) finds himself disillusioned with the prospect of having only one career choice honey. As he ventures outside of the hive for the first time he breaks one of the cardinal rules of the bee world and talks to a human a New York City florist named Vanessa (Renee Zellweger). He is shocked to discover that the humans have been stealing and eating the bee s honey for centuries. He ultimately realizes that his true calling in life is to set the world right by suing the human race. That is until the ensuing chaos upsets the very balance of nature. It is up to Barry to prove that even a little bee can spell big changes in the world.System Requirements:Running Time; 90 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: CHILDREN/FAMILY Rating: PG UPC: 097361179445 Manufacturer No: 117944
Don't waste your time I got this for my kids, ages 7,9 and 11. watched it once, haven't touched it since. Was a very boring, disappointment.
MOVIE MAGIC MY KIDS LOVED THIS MOVIE I LOVE THIS MOVIE WE SAT DOWN AS A FAMILY AND WATCHED IT IT WAS CUTE AND VERY FUNNY SO IF ANYONE HAS KIDS AND WANT TO WATCH A FAMILY MOVIE BUY THIS ONE
B Movie? More like D minus As much as I love Jerry Seinfeld's jokes, this movie is flat-out disappointing. It's really fun to see a bee talk to humans in "Bee Movie," but something in the interaction goes terribly wrong.
First of all, the movie tries to show a romance between a bee and a woman. It gets even weirder when the woman has a human boyfriend. Okay, maybe it's interesting to have those relations with humans, but it just seems weird to think about those things when the main characters have different physiologies.
Second, near the end of the movie, the touching ending gets way too overblown and unrealistic. Think about it--a humongous batch of flowers to save the world from a lack of food. Bees saving the airplane carrying the batch of flowers. Sorry, the bees carried it to the airport. Somehow they developed superhuman strength. I don't understand how on Earth this is supposed to happen.
Worse still, the film gets ridiculous with the court scene between the bees and the human corporations. I like Seinfeld's jokes, but are humans really going to take bees seriously? They're bees. They can be squashed by humans. In fact, they get sprayed too. And they die in court. Isn't there something completely wrong with this?
This is a confusing movie that is supposed to teach kids about the importance of globalization. Globalization. The sharing of resources among nations. Kids are really not going to understand the message of this movie. "Bee Movie" really could have been like "Ratatouille," which was a story about a rat becoming a star, even though he was a hated pest by humans. Instead, "Bee Movie" falls flat on its face with too many problems. Do kids a favor and show them "Ratatouille" instead.
Don't think so hard loved it.
my honey, Norman, and I just watched the delightful Bee Movie, and we loved it. laughed out loud nearly all the way thru it.
maybe it's a "kid's" movie - but, we are an old married retired couple with no kids in the house and we laughed our asses off.
the humor, in part, may go right over the heads of kids. little things like the Larry King part, kids are not going to get it. oh, kids will enjoy this movie, but, we adults need to not pass it up thinking it's "just a kid's movie," as it is great for all ages.
why compare it to Shrek, or Ice Age, or Monster's Inc?? it is nothing like those. it's a great funny nice movie.
stop thinking so hard, you'll hurt yourself and you'll miss the delight in life.
so says gramma Sally.
"Is he a Bee? Ehh; Bee-ish" This movie is all over the place - it's a combination of stuff we've seen before, and stuff that doesn't work. It has weird, kid-inappropriate humor, such as a suicide joke ("Dear Mr. Katzenberg, after watching your movie, my six year old asked what a 'suicide pact' is...") and references to the sinister "white man." Now there's something a six year old can laugh at! It also has major logic errors, for example, how it is clearly set up that Bees can't fly in rain, then in the climax of the movie, bees have to 'save the day' during a massive storm... which conveniently has no rain! But the very strange, even creepy, thing about this movie is the deeper thematic material that appears at least partly intentional - how Seinfeld repeatedly sets up that Bees are Jews (i.e. "I hope she's Bee-ish", "Don't date a WASP" - a pun on White Anglo-Saxon Protestant WASP's) which isn't a problem until he sets out a plot about a court case where Bees are suing for their honey (money?) due to what Barry Benson terms "slave labor." Given that there have been many high profile court cases in the past decade involving reparations for slave labor of Jews during WWII era, it is particularly weird that the clincher piece of evidence in the Bee trial is that Bees are smoked by the hundred with some kind of gas from a machine. There is imagery of Bee hive boxes being like a large work camp and references to beekeepers as being like guards. Yes, this material would go over the heads of most viewers, but it can't be denied that it is there in plain sight nonetheless - right there in the movie as the A-plot - whether Seinfeld or the producers were even aware of it or not. Indeed, when Jerry Seinfeld arrived in Israel to promote this movie in late 2007, he was grilled repeatedly about "holocaust analogies" in "Bee Movie." Remember that as funny as the "Seinfeld" TV show was, it had pretty dark, bleak and cruel characters and plotlines (George plotting to kill his fiance?) and therefore was about deeper things than just friends living in New York like the show "Friends," and, like "Curb Your Enthusiasm," also at times dealt with the fears and darker psychological phobias of being Jewish in a sometimes anti-Jewish world. So maybe Seinfeld doing a movie ostensibly for kids was just a bit of a wrong fit, despite his outwardly amiable persona.