CONCUSSION (2015)
Directed by Peter
Landesman
Columiba, 122
minutes, PG-13 (violence)
* * *
If you were buying a new car and read that a particular
brand had a 28% chance of blowing up, would you buy it? If a drug caused 28% of
its users to suffer such serious side effects that suicides ensued, would the
FDA approve it? Now consider that we have such a product/drug going out to tens
of millions of addicts every Sunday: the National Football League.
Concussion is a
sports/biopic film that spotlights Dr. Bennet Omalu (Will Smith), a rising Nigerian-born
pathologist living in Pittsburgh. His immigrant dream receives a rude shock in
2002; on his dissection slab lies Mike Webster, a Hall of Fame center for the
Steelers who died a broken-down bum at the age of 50. The initial verdict,
cardiac arrest, made no sense to Dr. Omalu, so he decided, over the objections
of several football-loving colleagues, to take a look inside Webster's brain. Dr.
Omalu found intensive brain trauma, the likes of which could have easily led
Webster to drugs, glue-sniffing, and antisocial behavior. Concussion tells the story of how Omalu, former Steelers team
doctor Dr. Julian Bailes (Alec Baldwin), Dr. Cyril Wecht (Albert Brooks), Dr.
Joseph Maroon (Arliss Howard), and Dr. Steven DeKorsky (Eddie Marsan) wrote the
pioneering study of CTE (chronic traumatic encephalopathy), which linked
repeated concussions to dementia, depression, sociopathic behavior, and
suicide.
More harrowing, it shows some of the lengths to which the
NFL was willing to go to try to suppress CTE research. In my review of Spotlight, I suggested that the Catholic
Church was the biggest crime syndicate in Boston; the NFL might qualify as the
biggest mob racket in the nation. Only money can explain why CTE findings were suppressed
until one of the conspiracy's doubters, former Players Association chief Dave
Duerson committed suicide in 2011 and left a note saying that Dr. Omalu was
right. (Junior Seau's suicide hit the front pages a year later.) At several
junctures of the film, comparisons are made between the NFL and Big Tobacco's
efforts in the 1990s to deny the science of smoking's health effects. Yes,
we're talking that level of evil.
Concussion is a
good film. I wish I could tell you it was a great one, but that would be false.
Will Smith is fabulous as Dr. Omalu–so good, that we instantly stop seeing the
star and think of Smith as an African man with a lilting accent honed in
British universities. His is one of the better portrayals of the pure
scientist's naïveté: the blind faith that reason and science speak an objective
voice immune to politics, power, and money. Smith would probably be considered
a Best Actor Oscar favorite were the film better than it is.
Alas, Director Peter Landesman pulls punches he should
roundhouse. The film is as much about Omalu's relationship with his eventual
wife, Kenyan immigrant Prema Mutiso (Guyu Mbatha-Raw), as it is about the NFL.
Ms. Mbatha-Raw is also very good, but she's central where she ought to be
secondary. The film ought to be less about romance and more about dirty deeds.
The attempts to quash the truth certainly took a toll on the Omalu household,
but the story of Concussion should be
like Spotlight–about the cover-up,
not domestic life under the covers and about masses, not just individuals. Speaking
of cover-ups, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell (underplayed by Luke Wilson) ought
to be a central villain in the script, not a mostly silent presence. It's also rather hard not to gag over some of the
overwrought snap-ons about the meaning of America through immigrant eyes. So
too are obligatory references to the "beauty" and "grace"
of football–sentiments completely at odds with the ugliness of Dr. Omalu's
findings.
By mixing romance with science, Concussion cheapens the latter. It also allows too much wiggle room
for football lovers to imagine that the NFL (or, indeed, science) has
"fixed" the problem. Not so. The day I viewed the film, the Boston Globe ran a front-page story
about Syracuse University quarterback A. J. Long, who–per university rules–was
banned from football after suffering his third concussion. You might call that
the least that can be done to address CTE, but Long and others like him have
been actively recruited by other colleges willing to overlook a mere three
concussions. Concussion might/should
have asked hard questions about the American addiction to sports that sanction
the sacrifice of young bodies for the vicarious thrills of spectators (Why, for example, doesn't hockey ban
fighting or full-body checking? Why do we watch the UFC?) It ignores the
question of whether we are any better than ancient Romans signifying
thumbs-down at a gladiator spectacle. Nor does it help explain why there were a
scant dozen people in the movie theater on NFL Sunday. Concussion is a decent movie, but it fumbled the chance to be a
landmark film. Rob Weir
Postscript for parents: See this film, especially if you
have sons. Buy those sons baseball mitts and soccer balls. Football? Can you
justify a one in four chance your son will suffer brain damage?