Libramedi
Intense, gripping, stylish and poignant
Odelecol
Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
Yash Wade
Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Ortiz
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
t-13196
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jletourneau-45361
The bee movie came out on October 28, 2007. Ratatouille came out on June 29 2007. If you think about it, they are the same movie. First the animal/insect leaves it's home. Then they both meet a human. Then they help the human get good at whatever the heck they do. This is the same as Target and Walmart. Walmart was founded on July 2, 1962, but Target was founded on June 27, 1827. What an analogy. Thanks for letting me share my theory with you and thanks for reading. See ya!!!
laineypaulus
You would think that a movie about bees would be very boring. But somehow, this story line makes it somewhat interesting in the fact that a bee is trying to sue the humans. And then after the bee successfully sues the human race for stealing the bees(all bees) honey, everything goes wrong.It just goes to show how important this movie really is and sheds some light on the importance of bees, which most of us hate because we think they are so useless. Another thing I like about the movie is the casting of it and the people that are in it. Jerry Seinfeld especially plays this part perfectly and his voice is the best. Any other voice would be inferior to his in really voicing the part.
justinlasater
The Bee Movie recently came on Netflix, and me and my family decided to watch it for the meme. I largely enjoyed, but as the movie went on I noticed something sinister. The Bee Movie is fascist propaganda. My family thought I was insane but it's true. Let's look at the story here. Barry B. Benson, faced with the soul-sucking repetitiveness of proletarian life working for Honex, decides to try to free himself and goes outside of the hive. After doing outside stuff, he figures out that bees are being exploited by humans, because humans are expropriating their honey/surplus value. Barry, having achieved class consciousness, starts a lawsuit/proletarian revolution. Barry, with the help of the bee proletariat, wins. Post- scarcity is reached, and fully automated luxury bee communism is achieved. It should be paradise. However, this is not where the movie ends. Because of some bullshit mismanagement, bees just stop doing anything, including pollination. The world's vegetation begins to die, and Barry has to deal with the guilt of closing his class- traitor girlfriend's flower shop and spelling the end of life on earth as we know it. To solve the issue, the bees work with the humans to solve the crisis, and afterwards, bees continue to make honey and allow humans to use it. In other words, they solve their problems by ending fully automated luxury bee communism and promoting HECKING CLASS COLLABORATION. How dare Jerry Seinfeld imply that fully automated luxury bee communism would doom us? How dare he try to tell us that fascist class collaboration is the answer? Who knew that by watching and sharing increasingly accelerating apian cinematic memes we were helping the enemy? I don't beelieve it.