![]() Sumpter is lovely, with an exquisitely calibrated performance, first less, than more, then much less reserved. And yet, when he gets up in front of the community group, people who are disappointed after a setback and ready to give up, we see for the first time some of the cadences and mannerisms and ability to inspire that are so familiar to us now. Sawyers shows us a Barack Obama who was a long way from the understanding and forgiveness toward his absent father he would convey in his book. The POTUS and FLOTUS we see on television are more polished and self-assured than they were in their 20’s. But some of the moments where nothing is said are just as moving, thanks to the performances of Sawyers and Sumpter, who do not impersonate the First Couple but give portrayals of great sensitivity and wisdom. The talk is superbly written and performed. Each bristles at first at being pushed, but then we see both of them genuinely grateful for being able to engage so honestly. Each kindly, if not gently, pushes the other, she on his bitterness toward his father, he on her joining a corporate law firm rather than pursuing her goal of working for the community. Despite all of her insistence that this is not a date, we can see her begin to get captivated. But then he tells her why he asked, and we can see her relax and start to appreciate his curiosity, depth, and knowledge. Perhaps some of her Princeton classmates assumed that “Good Times,” set in the projects of Chicago, was based on families like hers. As they look at paintings by Ernie Barnes, Barack asks Michelle if she ever watched the television show, “Good Times.” She says the Robinsons were more of a “Dick van Dyke Show” family, and we can tell she is a bit defensive. One of the pleasures of this film is listening in as two extremely intelligent people uncertain about where they are going but certain they want to improve the lives of the people in their communities, getting to know one another through a thoughtful, thought-provoking, and above all honest conversation, especially as we see the growing pleasure each of them feels in finding someone who can both understand and challenge them. She also notices, but does not mention, that the floorboard of his car is rusted through. “I was hoping you wouldn’t notice.” She points out that she is his supervisor and she has noticed his lateness at work as well. ![]() “You’re late,” she says when he arrives at her home. ![]() Then there is a glimpse of his “preparation” for the date - smoking and reading a book. She is just accompanying the law student she has been assigned to supervise for the summer to a community meeting. Michelle Robinson (Tika Sumpter, who also co-produced) is put together so meticulously that her father (Phillip Edward Van Lear) teases her: “Can’t you at least run a comb through your hair?” She insists to her parents, as she will to Barack, that this is not a date. We begin with the amusing contrast of their preparations for the date. But it also is especially meaningful as we come to the end of the Obama administration, and only the most partisan opponents can fail to appreciate their graciousness, elegance, and family values - and the true partnership and romantic spark that is evident in their relationship. We know what they will do and who they will become. The historical context is primarily significant because we start off with information the characters do not have. It would still be utterly witty, charming, and captivating even if it was not based on the real-life beginning of the romance of Barack and Michelle Obama. “Southside With You” is a rare movie that shows us what it is really like to fall in love, over the course of an all-day first date. If they throw in a chirpy pop song over a montage of the highly attractive pair walking on the beach and laughing together at a street fair, we are happy to believe that they are in love and we can move on to the (short-term) complication before the happy ending. People who make movies know that we are eager to see couples falling in love.
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