By Steven Zeitchik

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It’s almost impossible to watch “The Blind Side,” a story of race and the power of education to overcome life’s brutalities, and not think of “Precious,” a story of race and the power of education to overcome life’s brutalities.

Both settle on misunderstood, gentle-giant, inner-city teenagers, and give them ways to escape their past with the help of people who care for them after their real families don’t.

Of course that’s like saying “Goodfellas” and “Analyze This” are both mob movies. Where “Precious” director Lee Daniels uses extreme style to blunt the impact of the brutality, “The Blind Side” director John Lee Hancock uses extreme sentiment, and comedy, to give his dramatized true story of a white upper-middle class Memphis family that adopts a black teenager (he has a preternatural ability to protect the quarterback — hence the blind side) a kind of warm glow; no one, with one or two exceptions, really does much to try to bring down the feelgood (as THR’s review notes).

Still, it’s nice to see that a sports-themed movie as eager as this one to win the audience’s affections — there are moments in the Warners/Alcon pic that are genuinely heartfelt (and funny) and those so drippingly  sweet it would make a bumblebee gag — can have more on its mind than just a simple underdog story. Even with all of the storybook elements, it least tries to give a sense of race and the way parts of the South currently engage with it. If “Precious” (character and movie) finds its redemption amid the do-gooder volunteerism of liberal New York, “Blind Side” does it amid the college-football Republicanism of upper-middle-class Tennessee.

cont reading button Blind Side, a red state Precious (just dont tell the director)