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Opening remarks will begin at 7 p.m., and winners of the 2008 Insect Fear Film Festival art contest will be announced. Face painting will be available, and entomology graduate students will do their best to demonstrate the "waggle dance" that foraging Western honey bees perform upon their return to the hive with pollen or nectar to inform their nestmates as to where they've been. Beckman Institute's Imaging Technology Center, Bugscope will provide a peek through a scanning electron microscope for an "up close and personal look at various bits and pieces of bees that are not usually visible to the naked eye," Berenbaum said. Early activities include an insect petting zoo and honey tasting. "It's a venerable tradition, dating back even before Aesop's famous take on the ant and the grasshopper."ĭoors will open at 6 p.m. "We see 'Bee Movie,' and its predecessor, 'Antz,' as a celebration of not just insect biology but the ability to draw parallels between insect biology and human biology," she said. "And at least conceptually the movie was right on target in saying that bees provide exceptionally useful pollination services."

The great thing about many animated insect films is that they invert our normal sense of reality, she said.

She noted that Homer Simpson doesn't have the right number of fingers, either, and that mice don't usually win battles of wit with cats, as in the Tom and Jerry cartoons.

It's insect fear from the insect's perspective this year at the Insect Fear Film Festival, with the feature films "Bee Movie," above, and "Antz." "The point is it's supposed to be funny." "They're not making a documentary here," Berenbaum said. Most people know that insects have six legs instead of four, she said, and that - unlike the male dominated hive in "Bee Movie" - in actuality male drones don't do much of anything except wait for the opportunity to mate with a virgin queen. Last November Berenbaum rented a theater and took the entire entomology department to see "Bee Movie," an experience that led her to invite Smith to be a part of this year's festival.Īnd while some have complained that "Bee Movie" isn't entomologically correct, Berenbaum has no problem with the way the critters are depicted. "Here the bees in the movie are quite agitated about their exploitation at the hands of humans." "This is what insects fear about humans," Berenbaum said. This time, the audience gets a peek at what our most domesticated insects think of us. The festival normally celebrates movies that exploit the human fear of insects. The festival will commemorate its 25th year with many other insect-related activities, including a screening of the HBO documentary, "Inside the Hive: The Making of 'Bee Movie,' " and a viewing of "Antz," which Smith also contributed to as head of layout.Įntomology professor and department head May Berenbaum founded the festival in 1984.
BEE MOVIE CAST FREE
It's insect fear from the insect's perspective this year at the Insect Fear Film Festival at the University of Illinois, with a free screening of "Bee Movie," hosted by its director, Simon J. Festivities begin at 6 p.m.ĬHAMPAIGN, Ill. A free screening of "Bee Movie," hosted by its director, Simon J.
