Thursday, January 7, 2016

Concussion - 2 smiles

“Concussion” should cause many to think about our nation’s most popular sport. Based on a true story, Will Smith plays Dr. Bennet Omalu, a Nigerian-born, hyper-motivated corner working in Pittsburgh. He treats the dead bodies he examines as his patients, carefully trying to determine the cause of their deaths. One day, he is assigned the body of a local legend, a former Pittsburgh Steelers and NFL Hall-of-Famer named Mike Webster (David Morse), a man who went from the height of success to living in a broken-down truck. Omalu notices something inconsistent with Webster’s brain, and against the protests of a fellow coroner and Steelers’ fan, decides to run some sophisticated tests, paying for them himself. With the backing of his no-nonsense boss (Albert Brooks), Omalu determines that Webster suffered a litany of concussions over his career, which eventually led to his erratic, irrational behavior. Omalu discovers that a great many football players have had similar problems and other inexplicable deaths have occurred. Thus begins Omalu’s fight, first to be taken seriously by the scientific community, then by the NFL. Helping him along the way is a remorseful former team doctor for the Steelers (Alec Baldwin) and the widows of other NFL players, whose husbands Omalu examines.


“Concussion” spends too much time on Omalu’s relationship with his future wife (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) when it should focus on the science. And while Smith doesn’t look anything like Dr. Omalu, his on-screen charisma keeps you involved in the story. However, the film’s greatest weakness is that the movie never gives Omalu a persuasive antagonist, someone that’s substantive enough for him to push against to create the necessary narrative tension. The NFL remains a vague, largely anonymous presence (the white elephant in the room). Dr. Omalu recently stated in a New York Times op-ed, that he doesn’t believe anyone under 18 should be permitted to play high-impact contact sports. And after seeing “Concussion,” you can understand why.

1 comment:

Sharilyn (or Shari) said...

I love reading your comments. However, you don't seem to be keeping up with all the movies out there.