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btb87 04-30-2006 10:16 PM

^^^^

Scary Movie is supposed to really be sorry and it STILL beat out Akeelah and the Bee?? :( I told little btb that I bet it would come in at #1 this weekend. Disappointing.

CrimsonTide4 05-01-2006 06:32 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by btb87
^^^^

Scary Movie is supposed to really be sorry and it STILL beat out Akeelah and the Bee?? :( I told little btb that I bet it would come in at #1 this weekend. Disappointing.

Extremely!!!

Folks can make Tyler Perry #1 twice but not Akeelah and the Bee? Black folks still afraid to learn versus laugh. I learned, laughed and cried in the movie. I just knew with Tyler sending out 2 e-mails endorsing the movie that WE would go see it.

Hell AMC now charges $4 for movies on WEdnesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays for any movie before noon.

GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

f8nacn 05-01-2006 06:52 AM

That is very surprising that it didn't come in any higher than 6...I too received those encouraging emails from Tyler Perry to go see the movie; however, I can admit I did not go see it this weekend. Going to see it this week though.

Reds6 05-01-2006 10:13 AM

Akeelah and the Bee is a great movie! If you have children this is a movie you must take them to see. I took my 9 year old son and we talked about the message after the movie.

NUPE4LIFE 05-01-2006 12:15 PM

I can't say that I'm surprised. We won't go support movies like this. I remember going to see a movie the same weekend that ATL came out and the AMC here was packed. There were people buying tickets for Saturday shows because all the Friday night shows were sold out. The larger problems is also that Black Hollywood doesn't support each other either. Tyler Perry should have been out helping to support this movie. At some point Madea can only be done so many times. Unless Madea is gonna live as long as Miss Jane Pittman. Mr. Perry doesn't understand that Madea doesn't give him carte blanche to do other types of movies and projects unless projects like 'Akeelah' are able to do well.

Hopefully for those of us who have seen this movie we can help encourage others to see this movie as well. 'Eve's Bayou' was a very good movie, but how many of us actually saw that movie when it was in the theater? Our movies are also not nominated for anything either unless they are a financial success. Why? Studios won't market and campaign for movies doing awards season if our movies don't do well during it's initial release. Akeelah not doing well just greenlighted ATLl 2, or the next 50 cent vehicle. And while 'Hustle and Flow' was a pretty decent movie do we really need another story about a Pimp who's trying to get of the game?

ladylike 05-01-2006 01:02 PM

The movie was cute, yet predictable.

The camera angles and music gave it a heightened sense of melodrama that was extremely unnneccessary. Keke Palmer who played Akeelah appears to have enough experience and poise to carry such a role without all the "extra." I also give kudos to the actors who played "Javier" and "Georgia" (Akeelah's best friend). :) At times the movie was sickeningly sweet and the plot was predictable enough that you could leave your seat for popcorn, return and not feel lost.

I applaud Laurence Fishburne for producing such a positive piece and it's my hope that children see themselves in Akeelah (her tenacity, strength and intelligence). :)

After that movie, I know I found myself looking up some of those words. :o :D

CrimsonTide4 05-01-2006 01:08 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by NUPE4LIFE
The larger problems is also that Black Hollywood doesn't support each other either. Tyler Perry should have been out helping to support this movie. At some point Madea can only be done so many times. Unless Madea is gonna live as long as Miss Jane Pittman. Mr. Perry doesn't understand that Madea doesn't give him carte blanche to do other types of movies and projects unless projects like 'Akeelah' are able to do well.

He did support the film. He sent 2 e-mails to those on his fan club urging us to go see the movie and support the movie. He said he liked the movie and believed that we should go see it.

Steve Harvey did the same and even had Angela on the show last week for an interview about the movie.

Miss. Mocha 05-02-2006 12:45 AM

I took my Girl Scout troop to see this movie on Saturday morning. I made the parents get them up early, so we could make the first showing. I just knew the theater would be packed (as it was for Madea). Sadly, it was not. It was about 3/4 full, but there was definitely no lack of seating.

My girls (who are 11,12 & 13) LOVED the movie. A parent who attended was brought to tears.

While I thought that there were some cliches in the movie, I really enjoyed the fact that the older brother & sister were so supportive of Akeelah.

Wolfman 05-02-2006 05:24 PM

I agree with NUPE4LIFE. We don't take matters of intellectual formation seriously, thus this movie would not be taken as seriously as a raucous comedy or hip hop-themed movie. When I went to see this movie in my town about 90% of the audience was caucasian. Although it was a bit formulaic, it was a good positive movie, especially good was the chemistry amongst the children (viz. Akeelah and Javier).

CrimsonTide4 05-04-2006 08:52 AM

On the fear of Excellence

Our biggest fear is not that we are inadequate.
Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us.
We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant,
or gorgeous
or talented
or fabulous?


Actually, who are you NOT to be?
You are a child of God.
You playing small doesn't serve the world.
There's nothing enlightened about shrinking
so that other people won't feel insecure around you.

We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us.
It's not just in some of us; it's in every one of us.
And as we let our own light shine,
we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.
As we are liberated from our fear of our own excellence,
our presence automatically liberates others.

And excellence becomes the standard of all our lives.



From A Return to Love, by Marianne Williamson

CrimsonTide4 05-04-2006 08:57 AM

ABC to Broadcast the National Spelling Bee on June 1:cool: :D

SKEEphistAKAte 05-06-2006 10:55 PM

I took my munchkin to see it this afternoon. I enjoyed the film. It was really positive. When we left my daughter (4 y/o) said "Well, I can spell cat, C-A-T....and dog, D-O-G..." I guess she felt inspired :D

CrimsonTide4 05-06-2006 11:16 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by SKEEphistAKAte
I took my munchkin to see it this afternoon. I enjoyed the film. It was really positive. When we left my daughter (4 y/o) said "Well, I can spell cat, C-A-T....and dog, D-O-G..." I guess she felt inspired :D
How precious. I am surprised she does not know how to spell Alpha Kappa Alpha. You slipping, Skee. :D:p

SKEEphistAKAte 05-07-2006 12:30 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by CrimsonTide4
How precious. I am surprised she does not know how to spell Alpha Kappa Alpha. You slipping, Skee. :D:p
We are working on it :D

FeeFee 05-08-2006 09:55 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Wolfman
I agree with NUPE4LIFE. We don't take matters of intellectual formation seriously, thus this movie would not be taken as seriously as a raucous comedy or hip hop-themed movie. When I went to see this movie in my town about 90% of the audience was caucasian. Although it was a bit formulaic, it was a good positive movie, especially good was the chemistry amongst the children (viz. Akeelah and Javier).
I took my 9 year old daughter to see the movie last night and we both enjoyed it very much. I especially enjoyed the chemistry between the Akeelah and Javier. I was pleasantly surprised at how the movie ended, it was quite moving and had me shedding some tears. I will definitely purchase it when it comes out on DVD.

CrimsonTide4 05-11-2006 05:16 PM

TEACHERS FREE THIS WEEKEND @ ANY AMC Theater
 
http://www.wsbtv.com/education/9192955/detail.html


That's good isht. :D

BlueReign 05-11-2006 09:58 PM

I could see this again!!
 
Yeah! I saw it last weekend with my daughter and a group of her 11 year old friends. We loved it. I almost cried at the end. I was really feeling Angela Basset's character.

I was really disappointed that the theater was not full.:( Many of my students still have not seen this. I think a protest for a field trip is in order!!!

f8nacn 05-12-2006 06:54 AM

Re: TEACHERS FREE THIS WEEKEND @ ANY AMC Theater
 
Quote:

Originally posted by CrimsonTide4
http://www.wsbtv.com/education/9192955/detail.html


That's good isht. :D

No Fair ....There isn't an AMC in the Richmond area! I know plenty of teachers who would love to see this!:(

jojapeach 05-12-2006 05:24 PM

GASP! They love us! They really love us!

This actually does mean something considering that I teach in Clayton County (GA), and we have a lot of issues right now.

just.ten.days.left....

CrimsonTide4 05-18-2006 10:21 AM

STILL FREE
 
from Eurweb.com

*AMC Entertainment and Lionsgate are extending the offer for every teacher in the United States to receive one free ticket to “Akeelah and the Bee” from Friday, May 19 through Thursday, May 25. The offer is valid exclusively at all theatres in the AMC system including: Loews Theatres, Star Theatres and Magic Johnson Theatres. The free"Bee", according to a press release, “is an effort to reward teachers at the end of the school year for their hard work and encourage them to see the inspiring education-themed movie.” Simply present a school issued ID card and a valid photo ID or a pay stub and a valid photo ID to your local AMC theatre playing the film.

:cool: :D :cool:

MsDJ80 05-20-2006 09:02 PM

Sounds like a plan...I can't wait till they start handing out cars:D j/k

Ascension30 05-24-2006 01:40 PM

Akeelah and the Bee article... so true
 
THE MO'KELLY REPORT: (Continue to) Boycott Akeelah and the Bee

No, I’m not talking about graduation from high school or college…as it is that time of year. I’m not talking about any of you out there who managed to marry your high school or college sweetheart…as it is also that time of year.

Congratulations are in order because ‘we’ managed to ‘stay the course.’ ‘We’ managed to be consistent and remain true to our collective ideals, blocking anything threatening our growth as a people.

Ladies and gentlemen, put your damn hands together for the successful boycott of the movie Akeelah and the Bee.

It takes real temerity to ignore arguably the best movie of the year. Not the best ‘Black’ movie of the year, but the BEST movie in all of 2006. That takes a level of dedication rarely seen and unheard of unmitigated gall.

Yes, I remember the odds were more in our favor with Phat Girlz. We had more ‘excuses’ available at our disposal. Everything from “not wanting to support a movie starring Mo’Nique,” to not supporting a movie with a supposedly misguided marketing campaign.”

Yes, I was worried. Deep down inside I knew ‘we’ wouldn’t be able to rely on those excuses the next time around and I worried whether we’d have the gumption to make sure another positive movie highlighting the Black experience would under-perform commercially.

When you lay it out on paper, it really didn’t look promising. There was a great script, great starring cast, including two Academy Award nominees Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne…and even a superb performance by relative newcomer Keke Palmer.

But ‘we’ had an ace in the hole. ‘We’ didn’t give a damn.

The movie was executive produced by Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban. Not Oprah, not Quincy, not Bill (Cosby), not Bob (Johnson) but Mark.

As in Mark Cuban. Uh, no thanks Mark. I’d appreciate it if you left the meaningful and ‘positive’ movies to ‘us.’ You have no business trying to produce thoughtful and thought-provoking African-American cinema. You AND Steven Spielberg can go straight to hell. I’m still mad at him for that abomination called The Color Purple. 11 Academy Award nominations? What in the hell was HE thinking?

See, what Mark Cuban didn’t understand was although he had the best of intentions and produced a stellar cinematic piece…he forgot one minor detail.

‘We’ don’t give a damn.

Never underestimate ignorance and indifference. They are more powerful and potent than virtually any force known to man. They are mother and father respectively to self-hatred and self-destruction. It’s true. Ignorance and hatred are inextricably linked; ergo ignorance of self can have only one end result. Mark Cuban was trying to mess all that up with messages about the ‘value of education’ or ‘being proud of who you are.’

How dare he?! Ignorance is bliss and he’s messing with our collective euphoria.

I was so scared that African-Americans might come out and support this movie I saw it three different times, err uh of course in the hopes of making sure other African-Americans didn’t try to see this movie. My job as a card-carrying ‘hater’ is to make sure that I, like most African-Americans would continue to wallow in mediocrity and relative stupidity.

No way in the world did I want Black folk seeing this wonderful story. No way in hell did I want people, especially Black people to support a movie that portrayed African-Americans AND Latinos in a positive light…even with a bit of innocent interracial romance included.


That’s simply unacceptable.


Unless Blacks and Latinos are trying to kill each other or shoot their way straight to jail, we have no business spending our money to see such uplifting garbage. Everybody knows that there are only three stories about minorities worth producing and supporting. You know, the one where we go to jail, the other one in which we just got out of jail…and that other, other one in which we go to jail, get out and develop a scheme that threatens us going back to jail. If the movie is not on the following list, we have no business supporting it. Please support all of these movies, now out on video.


Lockdown

3 Strikes

Caught Up

Get Rich or Die Tryin’

Paid in Full

Civil Brand

(and 187 other movies that I don’t have time to list)


Thank God, ‘we’ are still stuck on stupid. Then again, most of us seemingly aren’t interested in having a relationship with the Lord, so probably He didn’t have anything to do with this. This is all on us. ‘We’ get all the credit.
Thanks be to ‘we.’ Let the church say ‘Amen!’

As it turned out, my services weren’t needed. The theater patrons were mostly White anyhow. I didn’t have to keep the multitude of ‘us’ away. ‘We’ staged our own successful boycott and nobody can take that away.

Mission accomplished.

To add further irony to insult, Akeelah and the Bee was written and directed by Doug Atchison, a White man. I had followed this script for many years, dating back to when it won a national honor in the Nicholls Fellowship Screenwriting competition. For the uninitiated, that’s the Academy Award amateur screenwriting competition.

In other words, all of Hollywood knew that this was a great movie waiting to be made from jump. Another Nicholls Fellowship winner was the shamefully positive (and commercially unsuccessful) movie Down in the Delta

Thank God though for the livid indifference of my people. Without your collective help, ‘we’ wouldn’t be celebrating today.

Let’s put it in quantitative terms:

After four weeks in wide release…Akeelah and the Bee with a great story, cast and matching performances has grossed:

$15,728,000

To put that number in perspective…

Get Rich or Die Tryin’ (50 Cent)

$30,981,850


Baby Boy (Tyrese – 2001)

$28,734,552


Antwone Fisher (Denzel – 2002)

$21,078,145


Soul Plane (Bunch of fools – 2004)

$13,922,211


Phat Girlz (Mo’Nique)

$6,922,865


Down in the Delta (Alfre Woodard)

$5,662,985


Soul Food (Ensemble - 1997)

$43,490,057


Waiting to Exhale (Ensemble - 1995)

$64,236,823


Dead Presidents (Ensemble – 1995)

$24,104,295


If we disregard inflation and assume these figures to be both static and directly comparable, we can come to the following conclusions.

• The commercial appeal of Akeelah and the Bee is akin to the maligned Soul Plane. I’m not sure how anyone should view this fact, no matter how you look at it. I’m disappointed that Soul Plane didn’t do better. I’d much see more cinema with ‘us’ acting like buffoons and smoking marijuana, than I would watch a story about an African-American girl attempt to win the national spelling bee.

• African-Americans have no intention of supporting meaningful Black cinema, irrespective of the color or gender of the writer, director or producers. That’s a very positive sign.

• Black Movies starring Black Academy Award-winners or nominees don’t do well. See: Antwone Fisher. It is a better business decision for a Hollywood studio to put out a movie featuring a rapper with a gun in both his hands, shooting at people who look like him…and that’s a beautiful thing.

• It’s been almost 10 years since a Black, positive, non comedic movie has been a commercial success. Hallelujah!

Today is a great day in Black America. We should all stop and take moment to fully appreciate the magnitude of this accomplishment. Only in America can a movie about two gay cowboys (which was supposedly so ‘repulsive’ and allegedly antithetical to American ideals and morals) could be better received and supported in its community than a positive movie about African-Americans in ours. Although Brokeback Mountain did not have national distribution upon its release…you fill in the rest. Although gays are estimated to be 10% of the population and African-Americans are 12%...you fill in the rest. If you can’t, I’ll do it for you.


Brokeback Mountain

$83,025853


Akeelah and the Bee

$15,728,000


Congratulations Black America…you didn’t let me down and your continued indifference is both noticed and needed.


Keep hope alive. You are not somebody.


The Mo'Kelly Report is an entertainment journal with a political slant. It is meant to inform, infuse and incite meaningful discourse...as well as entertain. The e-book "The Best of The Mo'Kelly Report" will be available...uh, soon. For more Mo’Kelly, http://mokellyreport.blogspot.com. Morris W. O'Kelly can be reached at mokellyreport@sbcglobal.net and he welcomes all commentary

Marie 05-24-2006 02:23 PM

Ok, here's a thought. While I admit, that we as African Americans don't have the best track record as far as supporting African American films, truthfully, how well is any black film going to do w/o the support and buying power of white America? Looking at the list, the only two movies (good or bad) that seemed to do well were Soul Food and Waiting to Exhale, and even that is mediocre for the entire theater life of the film. I'm just wandering if any movie solely targeting the black community will ever truly prosper in the way that 'white' movies do (even if fully supported by the black community). I honestly don't know, its just a thought. I'd be interested to see what percentage of any movie's revenue is generated by African Americans.

Personally, I'm not a huge movie goer (usually only while on dates), so I can't really speak to why Akeelah and the Bee didn't do well. The impression that I got from the few commercials that I did see was that it had something to do w/a spelling bee and an African proverb/fable (that's just what the name sounded like to me) and it'd be good for the kids. As a young, single, child-less woman it didn't strike me as 'must see on the big screen' film. However, like I said, I'm not a movie goer, so I really only come out for movies that I think will have more of an impact in the theater (action-type flicks).

Virtuous Woman 05-24-2006 02:40 PM

I think the article offered an interesting perspective. It is really sad that parents are not exposing their children to such a positive movie.

TonyB06 05-27-2006 05:39 PM

I just took my daughters to see this movie this afternoon. Great, heart-warming flick.

.... of course I'm now having flashbacks from three years of high school Latin.

AKA2D '91 08-29-2006 02:12 PM

Released today on DVD!

1browngirl 08-29-2006 02:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AKA2D '91
Released today on DVD!

And...if you have the Sept issue of Essence with Beyonce on the cover, there's a coupon inside for $2 off the purchase price of the DVD.

ScholarOn 08-31-2006 04:49 PM

We watched this for our family night this week and Nas and Nia loves it. Nia. who's only 2 was walking around the house spelling out wordslike she knew what they meant.

Very good stuff.

Lady of Pearl 09-04-2006 02:43 PM

Missed the movie-by the time I decided to see it it was gone!:mad: However, it is now out on DVD! maybe it will make more money now!

Divalawgirl 09-04-2006 03:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 1browngirl
And...if you have the Sept issue of Essence with Beyonce on the cover, there's a coupon inside for $2 off the purchase price of the DVD.


Really? I missed that.

ladygreek 10-01-2006 02:04 AM

Okay, I know I am waaaaaayyyyyy late on this, but I just saw the movie on cable ppv. All I got to say is it is the BEST feel good movie ever! And when it got to the scenes where Wake Up Everybody was sung the tears flowed until the end.

*Still wiping away tears*

20plgrl 10-01-2006 12:44 PM

At the National NAACP the youth watched the movie. My children who are teenagers wanted me to purchase it. It was wonderful!

Granny 10-03-2006 01:29 PM

I saw it last Sunday via On Demand and I cried so hard I thought I was going to get kicked out of my apartment complex. I cried through every spelling bee that child participated in during the movie. It was a wonderful movie!


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