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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Since winning an Academy Award for his exuberant performance
in
Jerry Maguire, Cuba Gooding Jr. has gotten little but static from
critics for a spate of calamitous career choices not seen since '80s-vintage
Burt Reynolds. But he triumphantly returns to Oscar-worthy status with his
moving performance as Radio, a mentally challenged young man, whom South
Carolina high school football coach Harold Jones (Ed Harris) takes under his
nurturing wing. This does not play well with the school's patient but
questioning principal (Alfre Woodard); the school's biggest athletic booster,
who views Radio as a distraction; the man's son, the team's star player, who
plays cruel pranks on the trusting Radio; and the Coach's teenage daughter, who
feels neglected. Almost all will be won over by Radio's trusting and good
nature. Based on a Sports Illustrated story, Radio was adapted for
the screen by Mike Rich, screenwriter of
The Rookie, and as in that superior family film, the heroics are mostly
off the field. As Coach says, with all the subtlety of a blitz, "We're not the
ones been teaching Radio; he's the one been teaching us." The ending, in which
we see the actual Radio, still cheering his team on 26 years later, will melt
the most cynical hearts. --Donald Liebenson
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