The Province

Spelling doc has its charms but lags along

- — Chris Knight

Midway through this spelling bee documentar­y from director Sam Rega I saw a familiar face. Nupur Lala. How did I know her?

Turns out she was the winner of the 1999 Scripps National Spelling Bee, the story of which was told in the 2002 doc Spellbound. It’s hard to overstate the legacy of that Oscar-nominated film; it helped kickstart this century’s love of the documentar­y genre.

Spelling the Dream takes a slightly different angle on the subject, aiming to figure out why Indian-Americans, who make up about one per cent of the U.S. population, so dominate the annual bee.

Twenty-six of the last 31 winners, including the last 12, were of Indian descent.

As far as Rega can figure it comes down to Indians seeing other Indians excel in the event and being motivated to do the same.

It may also help that the motherland is a polyglotta­l place. If your parents are Indian, it’s quite possible each knows a different language from childhood, in addition to the official language of Hindi.

And as someone notes, “English was around.”

Spelling the Dream does a good job of celebratin­g this immigrant excellence, but beyond that it struggles to create the same kind of tension as its documentar­y predecesso­r. Once the novelty wears off, the movie is — how do I put this? — plebeian. P-L-E-B-E-I-A-N. Plebeian.

 ?? — NETFLIX ?? Spelling the Dream features competitor­s like Akash, 7, who’s been spelling since he was two.
— NETFLIX Spelling the Dream features competitor­s like Akash, 7, who’s been spelling since he was two.

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