Movie Review: The Secret Life of Bees

Dakota Fanning must be stopped. I’m serious.

The scenery-chewing 14-year-old has engaged in her fair share of histrionics in her films up to this point, but never has it been so overwrought and never has it been so obnoxious as in The Secret Life of Bees, a racial tension drama based on the bestselling novel by Sue Monk Kidd.

Fanning plays Lily, a girl whose mother died tragically and whose father has an anger problem he deals with by forcing her to kneel on a pile of grits on the kitchen floor, shredding her knees. Lily has plenty of reason to be troubled, but subtlety has never been on Fanning’s radar and she plays it with a typically overacted series of emotional breakdowns.

The film is set in the racially charged South Carolina of the ‘60s, and Lily runs away from home with her caretaker Rosaleen (Jennifer Hudson) after Rosaleen nearly gets beaten to death by several white men.

Lily leads them to a remote town where she believes her mother once lived, and desperate for shelter, they come across the home of the Boatwright sisters, August, June, and May (Queen Latifah, Alicia Keys, and Sophie Okonedo.) Originally women in their 60s in the book, their ages have been cut in half in the film to bring aboard some more marketable stars to play their parts.

August is a beekeeper, and the family is involved in a honey-making business that has given them the kind of prosperity Lily has never even seen. She takes Lily under her wing, showing her how to care for the bees and making her an integral part of the honey operation.

It may be a lazy metaphor, but the entire screenplay is coated with the same kind of sweet, sticky honey that the Boatwright sisters produce. On the saccharine scale, this one falls somewhere around the sweetness-induced coma level.

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Article Author: Dusty Somers

Dusty Somers hails from Seattle, and is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma with a B.A. in journalism. He is a member of the Online Film Critics Society.

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