
Critic Reviews
72
Metascore
Generally Favorable
positive
27(90%)
mixed
3(10%)
negative
0(0%)
Showing 30 Critic Reviews
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Metascore
Metascore
100
Keke Palmer, a young Chicago actress whose first role was as Queen Latifah's niece in "Barbershop 2," becomes an important young star with this movie. It puts her in Dakota Fanning and Thora Cross territory, and there's something about her poise and self-possession that hints she will grow up to be a considerable actress.
90
Splendiferous.
88
All the gears, in fact, are shamelessly visible, yet they lock smoothly and resonantly into place. If Akeelah and the Bee is a generic, well-oiled commercial contraption, it is the first to credibly dramatize the plight of a truly gifted, poor black child.
83
Blessed with excellent turns by Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne, this feel-gooder revels in its hip-to-be-square hyperliteracy, and neatly exceeds its own PSA-ness, practically amounting to a black, preteen "Good Will Hunting."
83
A movie like this could easy slide into Shirley Temple territory, showcasing a child actor so full of sweetness and light and good, old-fashioned spunk that audiences wince. But Palmer, whose enthusiasm and energy never seem forced, avoids all those traps; her Akeelah is never less than believable.
80
A sweet-natured, immensely likable family film.
80
The innate suspense and charm of the spelling bee, along with a trio of crack performances, turn what is in essence a formulaic sports picture into something more satisfying: an underdog tale that manages to inspire without being sappy.
80
This small gem about a South Central LA girl with a gift for spelling restores luster to the family genre.
80
A film like this has to be seen. It's beautiful, it's encouraging, and it really inspires its audience to commit to something positive.
75
A slight but winning heart-tugger.