"Southside With You" — a date movie about a date — won't jolt the box office like a summer superhero movie might. But the film, which premiered this weekend, may become one of the most talked about movies this year.
That's because the first date depicted in "Southside With You" happens to be between a woman named Michelle and a man named Barack.
Yes, the future first lady and president.
But before then, the two were like most young people developing adult identities while wrestling with the pasts that forged them. They were unknown, uncertain and undefined, and the universality of the young couple coming to terms with life's choices — and each other — is one of many reasons "Southside" succeeds. Other intangibles include restrained performances by Parker Sawyer and Tika Sumpter, both of whom resist falling into impersonations.
The movie's leisurely pace helps, too, reflecting the daylong date (a description Michelle initially resists) that follows the budding couple from an art museum to a community organizing meeting to drinks to a screening of Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" to their first kiss outside a Baskin Robbins.
In between, moviegoers are given glimpses of the future president's peripatetic upbringing, political passion and rhetorical gifts, as well as the strength and grace that later made Michelle so widely admired.
Most notably, "Southside With You" presents its protagonists as accessible, relatable people, not the political symbols the Obamas and other first couples become.
Accessible isn't the image of this year's top two presidential contenders. As public figures for decades, their lack of real-life relatability may be as much a factor as policies as reasons why Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton poll as the least-liked presidential contenders ever.