Bee Season (film)
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| Bee Season | |
|---|---|
©Foxsearchlight 2005 |
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| Directed by | Scott McGehee David Siegel |
| Produced by | Albert Berger Ron Yerxa Peggy Rajski (executive) Mark Romanek (executive) Arnon Milchan (executive) |
| Written by | Myla Goldberg (novel), Naomi Foner |
| Starring | Richard Gere Juliette Binoche Flora Cross Max Minghella Kate Bosworth |
| Music by | Peter Nashel |
| Distributed by | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
| Release date(s) | September 3, 2005 |
| Running time | 104 min. |
| Language | English |
| IMDb profile | |
Bee Season is a 2005 feature film based on the 2000 novel by Myla Goldberg. The film was directed by Scott McGehee and David Siegel and written by Naomi Foner.
Contents |
Saul Naumann (Gere) is a somewhat controlling Jewish husband and father. A Religious Studies professor at UC Berkeley, Saul wrote his graduate thesis on the Kabbalah. A devout Jew, his wife Miriam (Binoche) converted to Judaism when they married, and he nurtured his son Aaron (Minghella) into a traditional studious Jew like him. When Eliza (Cross) wins her class spelling bee, they embark on a course of Kabbalah study to help her win. The film follows the family and the spiritual quests upon which they journey, in large part because of Saul: Miriam's attempt to make herself whole, Aaron's religious uncertainty, and Eliza's desire to be closer to her father.
Miriam lives a secret life throughout her entire marriage to Saul, trying to fulfill the religious idea she learned from him, tikkun olam, or "repairing the world" and "reuniting its shards." She takes this meaning literally and slowly collects trinkets she finds beautiful (sometimes breaking into people's houses and stealing them) and storing them in a warehouse, trying to hold the light of God in them. Saul's son, Aaron, grows unsure of the Judaism foisted on him by his father, and in trying to find a faith he personally believes in, he becomes a Hare Krishna after meeting a woman named Chali in the park. For Eliza, her experience begins with a desire to be as close to her father as he and Aaron are; the two would often have discussions about Judaism and play music together. Saul's graduate thesis on Kabbalah writer Abraham Abulafia (who believed that careful analysis of words could lead to contact with God) brings Saul and Eliza closer together when Saul learns Eliza has won the district spelling bee. Upon learning of her success Saul takes control of Eliza's life, trying to coach her with the Kabbalah teachings he knows so well (humorously ending up much like the controlling parents stereotypically seen in childhood competitions like spelling bees, though with different reasons). Eliza enjoys the renewed attention of her father and pursues the competition with her father's involvement. This comes at the expense of Aaron, who receives less time with Saul, even as he falls deeper into his religious dubiosity. At the center of the film, Eliza becomes Saul's newest religious project. Eliza continues to do well at spelling bees seemingly because of a higher spiritual connection with God, as Abraham Abulafia wrote about; visions appear to her and help her spell the word, no matter how difficult. In the final scenes, however, Eliza purposely misspells the word origami (a word she had practiced with Saul the night before) to place second at the National Spelling Bee.
While the literal plot simply follows a girl from a somewhat dysfunctional family moving through the world of competitive spelling, the actual plot of Bee Season is a much more complex one on personal religious views. Saul can be seen a Kabbalistic figure himself, desperately trying to become closer to God, though instead of using knowledge (as one does in Kabbalah), Saul uses each of his family members to deepen his own religious sense (an act finally uncovered by Aaron near the film's end). Meanwhile, his wife, Miriam, is caught stealing and is sent to a mental institution. The relationships between all members of the family which were once close and warm become very strained.
The movie generally follows the plot of Goldberg's novel, but with some notable changes. In the novel, Saul is a cantor, not a college professor. Miriam was born Jewish, rather that being a convert. Eliza did not get second place in the national spelling bee, though she did well. It was not until months later, when it came time at her school spelling bee to make her second attempt at the National Spelling Bee, that Eliza decided to get a word wrong on purpose. Chali, the person who introduces Aaron to the Hare Krishna religion, is a man in the novel. Also, in the novel, Aaron plays the guitar, where else in the film, he plays the cello.
- Richard Gere – Saul Naumann
- Juliette Binoche – Miriam Naumann
- Flora Cross – Eliza Naumann
- Max Minghella – Aaron Naumann
- Kate Bosworth – Chali
- Thomas Loher – Audience Member
As of January 29th, 2006 Bee Season had taken in a gross in the United States of $1,177,082 with an opening American weekend of $120,544.[1] Bee Season's single award nomination was a Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Young Actress nomination for Flora Cross.[2] The DVD was released in the US April 4, 2006.[3]
- ^ Business details for Bee Season for IMDb, retrieved March 24, 2006
- ^ Awards details for Bee Season for IMDb, retrieved March 24, 2006
- ^ Bee Season: DVD