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Movie Review: The Blind Side
By ROGER MOORE ORLANDO (FLA.) SENTINEL
This article was published November 20, 2009 at 3:58 a.m.
LITTLE ROCK Sandra Bullock retrieves some of the career momentum All About Steve threatened to kill with The Blind Side, a smart and moving drama about a Memphis steel magnolia who doesn’t bloom until she takes in a homeless teen and gives him a life.
Bullock gives her best performance in years in service of a John Lee Hancock (The Rookie) film about compassion, empathy, family and that old-time Southern religion - football. She stars as Leigh Anne Tuohy, an upper-middle-class decorator, happily married to a successful Taco Bell franchisee (Tim McGraw), a glammed-up woman of a certain age who is used to getting her own way.
And when she sees the very large, plainly poor black teen (Quinton Aaron) who seems to have nowhere to go, walking aimlessly in the rain, her better angel runs smack dab into her blunt, bluff style. Does he have a home?
“Don’t you dare lie to me.”
As Michael Oher walks into the House Beautiful two story the Tuohys call home, an odyssey begins, a journey that the Tuohy family takes with young Michael. He’s an enormous kid labeled as “slow” and dumb, but a “gentle giant,” and a guy of such size and athleticism that he’s a natural at a position that Leigh Anne, narrating from the Michael Lewis book this is based on, tells us is the “second most important position” in football - left offensive tackle.
He’s the guy who protects the quarterback from his blind side, the sacks that can cripple a guy like Joe Theismann. As the story unfolds, we invest in Michael’s struggle and we watch the Tuohys invest as well. They have his back, and he’s their rock - protecting their blind side.
The movie is a pretty conventional feel-good sports drama in many ways. But Bullock and Aaron give it heart that transcends the genre. Aaron, without much dialogue, gets across that this big, quiet, seemingly dumb guy has a soul and native intelligence, even as he struggles with the game, the academics and everything else at the private school he attends.
“I look and I see white everywhere,” he writes. “White walls ... and white people.”
In The Blind Side Bullock shows us something she hasn’t trotted out as an actress - righteous fury. Leigh Anne is a tigress defending herself and her decision to take in this kid in racially polarized Memphis, and Bullock makes her sympathetic, a Christian conservative who bristles at the suggestion that she’s doing this out of “white guilt.”
MovieStyle, Pages 36 on 11/20/2009
Print Headline: REVIEW The Blind Side








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