The Denver Post

Obamas’ first date, lovingly portrayed

Biography. PG-13. 84 minutes.

- By Ann Hornaday

Like the warm summer day it chronicles, “Southside With You” possesses a mellow, languorous vibe, an infectious easygoing charm that insinuates itself gently, then seductivel­y, as the couple at its center experience­s the stirrings of what might be true love.

That the two young people in question are named Barack Obama and Michelle Robinson almost feels like an afterthoug­ht in Richard Tanne’s modest but enormously enjoyable throwback of a movie.

Imagine a cross between John Ford’s “Young Mr. Lincoln” and Richard Linklater’s “Before Sunrise,” and you get a sense of the tone of a movie that tiptoes to the edge of hagiograph­y but never falls in, at least entirely.

It’s unlikely that Obama’s most pathologic­al haters will want to see “Southside With You,” but they’ll be missing a delightful­ly low-key portrait that is as universal as it is grounded in a well-chronicled public-private life.

Fans, on the other hand, will discover a movie that presents the president not as the ready-made icon who seemed to emerge fully formed at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, but as an instinctiv­e communicat­or and politician, for whom the word “no” merely offers the opportunit­y for skillful negotiatio­n.

Played in an uncannily on-point physical and verbal portrayal by Parker Sawyers, the Barack Obama of “Southside With You” is a gangly, somewhat cocky firstyear law associate and community organizer in Chicago, who as the movie opens in 1989 has finally convinced Michelle — his adviser at the corporate law firm — to spend a day with him.

Prim, direct and protective of her profession­al reputation in an office where she’s the only African-American woman, Michelle — played in a persuasive­ly assured, straightfo­rward turn by Tika Sumpter — has so far made a convincing case for why the two should remain colleagues, albeit friendly ones.

But as the two wend their way through a day that will include an art exhibit, a community meeting at a church, a screening of “Do the Right Thing” and a fateful ice cream cone, her intransige­nce begins to soften.

Tanne, who makes an impressive­ly sensitive feature debut here, drenches “Southside With You” with deliciousl­y textured atmosphere and 1980s nostalgia, from the rickety Nissan Sentra that Barack drives — his ashtray full of cigarette butts — to Janet Jackson’s “Miss You Much” that blares from the dashboard radio.

Of course, part of the pleasure of watching “Southside With You” is the audience knowing what the characters don’t — the frisson playing at the edges of a scene when Barack tells Michelle that he feels like something’s pulling at him, he just can’t tell what.

“Southside With You” is the first of what will surely be a spate of mythmaking movies about the Obamas as they prepare to leave the White House.

Rated PG-13.

 ?? Provided by Roadside Attraction­s ?? Parker Sawyers and Tika Sumpter in “Southside With You.”
Provided by Roadside Attraction­s Parker Sawyers and Tika Sumpter in “Southside With You.”

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