Metacritic Film

Spellbound

Starring Harry Altman, Angela Arenivar, Ted Brigham, April DeGideo, Neil Kadakia, Nupur Lala, Emily Stagg, Ashley White, and Alex Cameron

MPAA RATING: G for General Audiences

ThinkFilm Inc.
Documentary
97 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters April 30, 2003

This documentary presents the intense, true-life experience of the National Spelling Bee as seen through the eyes of eight driven, young spellers. (ThinkFilm)

DIRECTED BY
Jeffrey Blitz

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

80 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Premiere Brooke Hauser
While it may be excruciating to watch a speller miss a word by a letter, it's just as exciting to watch another kid jump the hurdle.
100 San Francisco Chronicle Carla Meyer
Resembles a Christopher Guest movie in that it follows obsessed, socially awkward folks on a seminal journey in their lives.
100 Boston Globe Ty Burr
At its most unsettling level, Spellbound asks us to consider what words are for and what childhood should be. It's as profound as anything you'll see this year, and, yes, it should have won the Oscar.
91 Portland Oregonian Marc Mohan
The end result is the best documentary you'll see this year, as thrilling a competition as any Super Bowl and as suspenseful a story as any Hitchcock film.
91 Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
Thrilling little epic set in the bewildering arena of the English language.
91 Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Arnold
Not only is it an enormously entertaining study of a curiously American institution, it also manages to be a nail-biting competition film, an engrossing group character study and a wonderfully graceful comedy of manners.
90 Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
At a time when so many in this country are at odds about what represents America at its best, it's refreshing and then some to see a film that everyone can agree is an example of exactly that.
90 The New York Times Dana Stevens
Enough drama, humor and unfiltered nail-biting suspense to put all the thrill-mongering screenwriters in Hollywood to shame.
90 Washington Post Ann Hornaday
Just might be the most action-packed suspense thriller of the summer.
90 Slate David Edelstein
The movie becomes a nail-biter, the audience hanging on every letter. Who could have anticipated that a spelling competition would yield such a heartbreaking thriller?
89 Austin Chronicle Sarah Hepola
As good, old-fashioned dorkfests go, it doesn't get much better than the National Spelling Bee, with its arcane words, bespectacled competitors, and stinging little bell.
88 Chicago Tribune Mark Caro
Boasts all of the drama and suspense of any reality TV show, but it actually stars smart people. And they're kids.
88 Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
The terrific Spellbound really isn't about the ability to tear words apart letter by letter. It's about nerve-wracking competitiveness.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
I love this movie, and I love the pride, spirit and sportsmanship of the kids who represent the best of American pluck and luck.
88 Rolling Stone Peter Travers
By the time they're onstage, your pulse is pounding right along with theirs. Spell this movie: g-r-e-a-t.
80 Dallas Observer Luke Y. Thompson
Consider it an athletic contest of the mind--ESPN does, as the sports network regularly televises the finals.
80 Chicago Reader Ted Shen
Blitz shows us these kids in all their quirkiness and dorkiness, letting them do much of the talking as he records them and their families at home.
80 Washington Post Michael O'Sullivan
Could hardly be more suspenseful if it were scripted.
80 LA Weekly Ella Taylor
For the committed word nerd, spelling has its intrinsic pleasures, but in Spellbound it's another example of the peculiarly American mania for turning everything -- even play --into work.
80 Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
Blitz captures the intensity of the bee itself, showing how it frazzles the nerves of even the most well-prepared spellers as, one by one, their colleagues and competitors drop away.
80 Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
More to the point of this marvelous film, who knew there were kids as heroic, in their various ways, as these valiant super-spellers?
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
Loses its momentum just when you'd expect the suspense to mount -- at the competition itself.
75 Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
As we watch them drilling with flashcards and worksheets, we hope they will win, but we're not sure what good it will do them.
75 Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
One of the many pleasures in Spellbound is watching the reactions of these young brainiacs, all under the age of 14, as they first hear the word they are being asked to spell (''Is that even a word?'' seems to be a common thought passing through their heads.)
70 The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
Can't help but be deeply engrossing, as it taps into a highly charged atmosphere that one parent dubs "a different form of child abuse."
70 Film Threat Merle Bertrand
Draws an unspoken parallel with, of all things, beauty pageants, complete with unnaturally driven kids and nervously supportive parents desperately trying not to appear too pushy.
70 TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
An enthralling, suspenseful documentary about spelling bees.
70 Village Voice Ed Park
In their randomness, the bee words take on an oracular quality--shades of kabbalistic gematria, or the "Sortes Vergilanae," the supernatural attributed to symbols on paper.
70 New York Magazine Peter Rainer
Entertaining documentary.
63 New York Daily News Jami Bernard
This could be a documentary about reading the body language of childhood.
63 USA Today Claudia Puig
Casts a potent spell.
63 ReelViews James Berardinelli
Despite rave reviews, film festival awards, and an Oscar nomination, Spellbound comes across as little more than a marginally compelling documentary -– the kind of movie that would be at home on PBS.
60 Variety Ronnie Scheib
Docu dispassionately examines this strange phenomenon of anachronistic Americana, created as a newspaper promotion in 1925.
50 New York Post Lou Lumenick
Many of the kids seem to be social outcasts of one kind or another, but Spellbound, which will show on cable later this year, doesn't dig deep enough to disturb the movie's relentless feel-good tone.

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