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	<title>Andy at The Movies &#187; Tim McGraw</title>
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		<title>Movie Review (Dan&#8217;s Take): The Blind Side (B-)</title>
		<link>http://www.andyatthemovies.com/movie-review-dans-take-the-blind-side-b/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyatthemovies.com/movie-review-dans-take-the-blind-side-b/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2009 17:47:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Oher]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandra Bullock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Blind Side]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tim McGraw]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Blind Side, the true life story of a wandering &#8220;orphan&#8221; taken in by a wealthy Tennessee family, works on the premise of clever subterfuge. The film is being marketed as a rags-to-riches sports success tale, but ultimately, it&#8217;s not that as much as it is a dollop of inspirational suggestion on matters of humanity, economic responsibility and showing a &#8220;blind side&#8221; to race; all in a football slicked shell. Director John Lee Hancock&#8217;s (The Rookie) adaptation of the book &#8220;The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game&#8221; avoids a few of the obvious sports cliches (or uses them as red herrings) and has a such a decent and sane message to deliver, its mild faults of being overlong and sugarcoated should be overlooked. Dramatically taken from his drug-addicted Mother at an early age, the gentle Michael &#8220;Big Mike&#8221; Oher has been through the foster home mill from childhood to adolescence. Thanks to a caring foster parent, Michael is admitted to an all-white Christian school when the coach sees his athletic skill and dreams of the day he can put Michael on his football team. But first &#8230;there&#8217;s those grades. Soon after his admittance, Michael is again abandoned and is seen roaming the streets by Leigh Anne Tuohy ( Sandra Bullock) and her family, who eventually give him a place to stay, a place to live and legal guardianship. Under their care, Michael blooms from an insecure cipher to an all-star Left Tackle and C+ student while equally expanding and enhancing the lives of those around him. If there&#8217;s one fault, The Blind Side could have used 20 minutes of editing to streamline its overlong 120 minutes.  The Blind Side finds its stride in lighter (though dangerously bordering on silly) moments but still holds sound, if a little more subdued, footing with the dramatic as well. And while it does lose some momentum in a cynical hangup the family confronts near the end, the slowdown is only a mild setback. As Leigh Anne Tuohy, a no-nonsense &#8220;trophy wife&#8221; blond, Bullock deftly carries the steely charm of an independent Southern woman: the kind who will happily punch all comers a new pruney, but only for their own good. And where most actors twang the living crap out of their Southern accents, Bullock makes hers sound pleasantly natural. It&#8217;s a subtle note, but one that adds to the performance rather than goofily detracting from it. Played opposite Bullock, everybody&#8217;s favorite country singer and hair plug recipient Tim McGraw provides a subdued and pleasant marital aspect as the loving, mild-mannered husband who knows, no matter what, his wife will knock him the crap out should he ever disagree. Strangely, there&#8217;s  a missing connection with Michael (as played by Quinton Aaron), a disconnect compounded by his quiet nature and the dominant story focus on the Tuohy family. Still, he evokes enough empathy, inspiration and strength to bolster what could have easily been a cardboard cutout. I have a hard time faulting a movie as earnest...]]></description>
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