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Affiliation Akeelah and the Bee The story is about an eleven year old girl, Akeela, who is a talented student and must surpass her personal encounters and those in her community so as to make her way to the National Spelling Bee. The movie uses some emotional techniques which see to it that the audience gets affected emotionally too. During an early scene, we are shown Akeelah being bullied by other students, who both dislike her cleverness and want to force her into assisting them with her school work.
Here, she is attacked physically. In this scene, the audience is pulled both into sympathizing with her for her being defenseless and angry towards the bullies. It reminded the audience of what goes on in schools and how the problem can be more intensive, especially where students from a lesser class are involved. During her final trials, there is a sense of anticipation, in which, the audience are anxious whether or not she will win. Anxiety, is also brought about, when her mother interrupts during a divisional contest, which made people wonder if she will be allowed to continue or be disqualified.
However, at an advanced scene, after Akeelah has earned public approval resulting from her partaking in spelling contests, one of her attackers cheers her. It brings out mixed reactions of joy and tears, for it makes the audience happy that the girl, who has come from far, has eventually won the contest. The community, back at Akeelah’s neighborhood, brought a gloomy feeling that made the audience realize how poor neighborhoods endanger the upbringing of children. It is characterized by the fact that Akeela’s young sister was a teenage mother and her younger brother was already a recruit in a local drug cartel.
Their being black American made them more disadvantageous, which made the audience sad about the fact that the inequality still exists among races (Pimentel, Charise & Sawyer, p.102). In conclusion, whatever reaction the movie expected from the audience, was well represented, as various emotions, were expressed from the audience’s point of view.Works CitedPimentel, Charise, and Cathleen Sawyer. "Akeelah And The Bee": Inspirational Story Of African-American Intellect And Triumph Or Racist Rhetoric Served Up On Another Platter?." Multicultural Perspectives 13.2 (2011): 100-104. ERIC. Web. 18 Mar. 2015.
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