In this era of strife and
economic struggles, it is at times difficult to remember the
simple things in life and how one can often find fulfillment
in places they never thought to look. In 1976’s in a small
football town in South Carolina, coach Harold Jones (Ed
Harris), is busy preparing his team for the coming season and
as is his usual process, ignoring his wife and daughter for
film studies and play design sessions. The town bonds over the
weekly games during the Fall, and coach Jones is a liked and
respected man amongst the people.
Life for coach Jones takes a turn when he discovers players
from his team tormenting a local boy who is slow and
illiterate whose only crime is pushing a shopping cart around
town and picking up a stray football that sailed over the
fence during a practice session. Disgusted and alarmed by the
action of this group of players, Jones punishes the players
and invites the young man to come to practice to help out
whenever he wants. Despite his communication issues, the young
man named James (Cuba Gooding Jr.) starts to open to the coach
and is able to communicate with far more ability then people
had given him credit for. James is being raised by his loving
and widowed mother who is at first weary of the coaches
intentions as people from his part of town do not often go out
of their way to help a person of color much less a disabled
one.
It is discovered that aside from food, James has a real
fondness for music and is soon given the nickname “Radio”
due to his ever-present radio. Before long, Radio not only
becomes a fixture on the team sidelines and practice sessions,
but in the very classrooms and halls of the school despite the
initial misgivings of the Principal (Alfre Woodard).
Eventually misgivings seem to fade as the constant enthusiasm
and desire to help endear Radio to many of those around him.
There are those in the town who are not found of this
arrangement however and see Radio as a distraction to the team
and behind a recent losing streak. As the season unfolds some
parents are concerned that the presence of Radio will
undermine the chances for scholarships for certain athletes on
the team setting up events for the remainder of the film.
While “Radio” is at times overly sentimental, the fine
work by Harris and the Oscar worthy performance of Gooding JR.
make the film well worth seeing. My biggest issue with the
film would that it did not address enough of what Radio’s
life was like after the events of the film. There is footage
in the closing credits of the real radio and Coach Jones, and
we are told that Radio is still a large part of the school and
it’s athletic programs. What we do not know is how Radio
supported himself over the years and what Coach Jones did
after the concluding events of the film.
Those factors aside, “Radio” is a moving film and a
triumph for Cuba Gooding JR. who shows that his first Oscar
was not a fluke and that he is very gifted and capable actor.