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Beeswax

  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
904
YOUR RATING
Beeswax (2009)
A pair of identical twin sisters -- one, who has been paraplegic since youth and gets around in a wheelchair, and the other -- "same face, different bodies."
Play trailer2:22
1 Video
8 Photos
ComedyDrama

A pair of identical twin sisters -- one, who has been paraplegic since youth and gets around in a wheelchair, and the other -- 'same face, different bodies.'A pair of identical twin sisters -- one, who has been paraplegic since youth and gets around in a wheelchair, and the other -- 'same face, different bodies.'A pair of identical twin sisters -- one, who has been paraplegic since youth and gets around in a wheelchair, and the other -- 'same face, different bodies.'

  • Director
    • Andrew Bujalski
  • Writer
    • Andrew Bujalski
  • Stars
    • Tilly Hatcher
    • Maggie Hatcher
    • Alex Karpovsky
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    904
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrew Bujalski
    • Writer
      • Andrew Bujalski
    • Stars
      • Tilly Hatcher
      • Maggie Hatcher
      • Alex Karpovsky
    • 13User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Beeswax
    Trailer 2:22
    Beeswax

    Photos7

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Tilly Hatcher
    • Jeannie
    Maggie Hatcher
    • Lauren
    Alex Karpovsky
    Alex Karpovsky
    • Merrill
    Katy O'Connor
    • Corinne
    David Zellner
    David Zellner
    • Scott
    Kyle Henry
    Kyle Henry
    • Michael
    S.J. Anderson
    • Teddy - customer
    Anne Dodge
    • Amanda
    Betty Blackwell
    • Lila
    Bryan Poyser
    Bryan Poyser
    • Jason - study buddy
    Rebecca McInroy
    • Holly - office woman
    Nathan Zellner
    Nathan Zellner
    • Lee
    Atietie Tonwe
    • Emeka
    Nina Sokol
    • Naomi
    Jillian Glantz
    • Wynonna
    Christy Moore
    • Paula - girls' mom
    Janet Pierson
    Janet Pierson
    • Sally
    D.J. Taitelbaum
    • A.C.
    • Director
      • Andrew Bujalski
    • Writer
      • Andrew Bujalski
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.1904
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    Featured reviews

    7petr-kalafatic

    I enjoy it

    No super.. (unrealistic stories, heroes, models etc.), it may happen next to our neighbors, I appreciate that..

    + believable actress + camera + story flow

    = good for me :-)

    ---------

    Your review does not contain enough lines - the minimum length for reviews is 10 lines of text. Please see the guidelines. Attempts to pad the comment with junk words can result in your account being blocked from future submissions.

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    8foldedspacemonkey

    A Successful Cinematic Experiment

    Jeannie (Tilly Hatcher), a girl in a wheelchair, owns a vintage clothing store. Amanda, her business partner, is deeply unsatisfied with how she runs the business and is considering a legal battle for ownership. Merrill (Alex Karpovsky), a young law student tries to help Jeannie by offering emotional support and legal advice, as well as introducing her to potential buyers. In the meanwhile, Lauren (Maggie Hatcher), Jeannie's slacker twin sister, looks for steady work and a general direction in her aimless drifter lifestyle. Finally, a new clerk is a welcome addition to the store but things get complicated when she turns out to be a tad too sentimental.

    Heralded as the King of the Mumblecore movement, Bujalski's films are uneventful "slices of life" naturalistic depictions of youth in shambles. Each story is a tragic tale of emotional teetering on the edge of madness. For this he has been compared to Cassavetes, but Bujalski's life depictions are actually sexless, unrooted, and deceptively intellectual (but not in a negative way).

    His characters recede inside themselves as they attempt to grasp for an adequate language to express what might be a conditionally repressed intensity. In a sense, they are the opposite of Cassavetes' bombastic, larger than life, overexpressive characters. But his means of examination are the same: full shots of bodies, matter-of-fact depictions of communicative behavior (mannerisms, tics), faces chosen for their anti-cinematic potential, so plain that they make our expected systems of dramatic representation collapse. Along the way we discover new modes of being, and an almost ethnographic look at human presence.

    Above it all, there is a kind of hidden essay on filmmaking and creativity:

    The sisters are twins. ('Same face, different bodies')

    The clothing store is called Storyville.

    Jeannie, paralyzed from the waist down as an audience surrogate, the "sitting down" metaphor, the watcher/observer, and the "real" manager of Storyville. She's involved in a legal dispute over the ownership of the store. The differences with the other owner are creative ones.

    Merrill, a law student, interested romantically in Jeannie, but also an artist, a kind of surrealist writer, always commenting on situations with non sequiturs, exaggerations, cartoonish excesses.

    Lauren, the second twin, her introductory scene sees her breaking up with a "boyfriend". She appears confused, or fickle. But she's obviously a lesbian. Throughout the movie she looks for work, speculates on possible futures, hangs out with drug addicts. The closest thing to a 'drifter' character in the story. She's the quantum fulcrum. It is through her presence that everyone else can feel anchored.

    Bujalski is popularly misunderstood. His desire to shoot 16mm, "small" stories and his use of first-time actors, tie him to a deeply experimental and innovative tradition of art cinema (Cassavetes, Jem Cohen, Andy Warhol, Pedro Costa). One can only hope he keeps on working without being too affected by the lack of popular approval. In my mind, he is constantly refreshing, layered, and dangerous, if you see cinema as a kind of schizophrenic simulation machine.
    1rustydinglekamp

    Why I gave this a 1...

    .... because IMDb won't let me rank it any less.

    Aimlessly directed and written with a ham fist, Beeswax is a movie that relies far too much on automatic indie film credibility and too little on making a cohesive story.

    I understand that this was meant to be quasi-documentary style, and film snobs might tell me that I just don't "get it" - that it's a slice of life, and that life doesn't read as smoothly as a movie script. But there's a REASON that movie scripts go smoothly: Because it's painful to watch a story like this get mired in minutia with no accountability for pacing or telling a complete tale.

    The cast did the best they could with what they were given, but this plays like someone's film school project. Self-indulgent, loaded with an unwarranted confidence that greatness is unfolding, Beeswax is strictly amateur night.
    9druid333-2

    Mind Your Own Beeswax (or...the fly on the wall approach)

    'Beeswax' is Andrew Bujalski's third feature film after two other independent features dealing with young,urbane 20 & 30-something hipsters (his two other feature films are 'Funny Ha,Ha' & 'Mutual Appreciation',as well as a short film,unseen by yours truly). This time,Bujalski's lens is turned to an area of Texas that may well be Austin. Two sisters,both fraternal twins,Lauren (played by Maggie Hatcher),and her wheelchair bound sister,Jeannie (Tilly Hatcher)share an apartment. Jeannie operates a vintage clothing shop that seems to be on the brink of collapse,due to the fact that Jeannie's business partner,Amanda (Anne Dodge)seems to want to drop out as a partner,but not before she decides to sue Jeannnie. Jeannie is getting very close to Lauren's ex boyfriend,Merrill (Alex Karpovsky),a would be lawyer who is just a breath away from passing his bar exam. Other characters drop in & out of this finely written & directed film (by Bujalski himself,who also wore a third hat as editor)that has to take it's time to sink under your skin to get the very real & true "fly on the wall" feel to it (the pacing is somewhat slow,but it's worth sticking with it until the end). Comparisons to the French film director,Eric Rohmer,or even John Cassavetes will be duly noted. This is a film with characters that are more real than the current dredge of cinedreck,conjured up by Hollywood...and certainly WAY more real than any of the (so called)reality TV shows that one can rot their brains on television with, can do. No MPAA rating,but contains some brief strong language & adult situations that would probably only land it a PG-13 rating if it was submitted,at the most.
    7runamokprods

    Grew on me...

    Intelligent, very low key mumble-core comedy/ drama that I liked better on reflection than while I was first watching it.

    While I was viewing, the lack of plot and forward motion seemed frustrating. But looking back I found all the little honest moments of human weirdness that Bujalski captured with his (apparently) semi-improvised style gave me more of a real look into the lives of these late 20 somethings than I would have gotten from a more plot driven narrative.

    And there IS a plot – about careers, about commitments, and about friendship. The tension over whether two friends who co-own a shop are actually going to sue each other over how the store is run is palpable, if not heart pounding. It's just the focus is more on details than on the big picture -- which is actually a lovely change from most films out there.

    Kudos too for having a lead character in a wheelchair and a) not making that the most important thing about her, and b) allowing her to be sexy, sexual, funny, angry, grumpy – all the things people with challenged lives rarely are in movies.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The two leads, Maggie and Tilly Hatcher, are real life long time friends of Director Andrew Bujalski. His script was inspired by his feeling of how the sisters would project as performers (as they are not professional actors).
    • Quotes

      Merrill: It's pretty intense to see you.

      Jeannie: It's intense to see you too.

    • Soundtracks
      Starlight
      Written and Performed by Escort

      Published by Sweet Sensation Publishing (ASCAP)

      Courtesy of Escort Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 14, 2009 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Воск
    • Filming locations
      • Austin, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Houston King Productions
      • Sisters Project
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $46,590
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,844
      • Aug 9, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $46,590
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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