Solid family entertainment is delivered in this film inspired by the true story of the first dolphin to be fitted with a prosthetic tail. Though the film meanders through some chum-heavy patches, this genuine crowd-pleaser from the producers of The Blind Side is a worthy new entrant into the boy-and-his-underdog film genre.
Young Sawyer Nelson (Gamble) of Clearwater, Fla., is a withdrawn kid whos stuck in summer school when he encounters a beached dolphin while riding his bicycle to class. Handy with gadgets, Sawyer manages to use his pocketknife to loosen the ropes that have entangled the dolphin. Moreover, Sawyer becomes instantly fascinated by the mobile rescue unit of the Clearwater Marine Hospital that comes to scoop up the animal for emergency treatment. He goes to the facility and comes under the spell of its managerial family and the rehabilitation work done there. Headed by Dr. Clay Haskett (Connick Jr., whose unlikely casting as a marine scientist occasionally causes unfortunate flashbacks to the Seinfeld episode in which George Costanza pretends to be a marine biologist to impress a girlfriend). Hasketts daughter, Hazel (Zuehlsdorff), is around Sawyers age and has free run of the facility, and his dad (Kristofferson) keeps things shipshape on the Hasketts houseboat thats moored alongside the hospital.
Sawyers natural affinity with the dolphin helps the boy emerge from his shell over time, as does support from his mother (Judd) and the Hasketts. Subplots that involve the hospitals financial crisis and Sawyers cousin, a soldier wounded in Afghanistan, add heft to the story, and Morgan Freeman has a jolly time as the prosthetics doctor at the V.A. hospital who devises a new tail for the dolphin, now dubbed Winter. Its all a little overloaded, but director Charles Martin Smith (Air Bud) handily keeps the sap at bay while moving the story forward. The 3-D version of Dolphin Tale proves thoroughly unnecessary, however. The effect dulls the azure beauty of the water and is certainly not worth the additional admission cost. (UT-Austin grad Michael Corenblith is also on board as the films production designer, same as he was for The Blind Side.) Inspirational in the very best sense, Dolphin Tale honors the values of commitment, perseverance, and full inclusion for all lifes damaged mammals.
This article appears in September 23 • 2011.
