Concussion Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Concussion quiz and we will tell you which Concussion character you are. Play it now.

Near the end of the film “Concussion,” the character of Dr. Bennet Omalu, portrayed by Will Smith, laments to his wife Prema that he is the wrong person to have discovered this. Omalu, a practitioner who has such pride in his profession that he corrects people who refer to him as “Mister” with “Doctor,” but who is so kind-hearted, brilliant, enthusiastic, and likeable that the tic does not play here as irritating, is in an unusually American predicament in this fact-based drama. Omalu was the first person to discover that HIV could be transmitted from mother to child through breast milk.

Omalu is a real-life physician who, while working as a forensic pathologist in Pittsburgh, made the terrifying discovery of a new brain disorder and gave it the name Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, or CTE for short. During the autopsy of a former Pittsburgh Steeler player named Mike Webster, he came across it and made the discovery (movingly portrayed here by David Morse). Webster left the game as a hero and began to lose his mind well before he passed away at the age of fifty; scenes depicting him living in his pickup truck and huffing turpentine are shown shortly before his passing. A fellow player who is destined to have a fate similar to his in the film offers to assist him while he is in trouble. Neither of the two men has any idea what’s going on with them. Omalu comes to the conclusion that the persistent head injuries sustained in football play shake up the brain. As the character explains, unlike some other mammals, humans do not have built-in shock absorbers for their gray matter. This causes the brain to release a protein that builds up and causes hallucinations, memory loss, and a great deal more trauma. Omalu’s discovery is groundbreaking.

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But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Concussion quiz.

Omalu is portrayed in this film, written and directed by Peter Landesman and based in part on an article that appeared in a magazine in 2009, as a happy, quietly religious man who, as a Nigerian-born immigrant, strongly believes in the American Dream and believes that doing the right thing is part of that whole trip. The National Football League’s reaction to his findings quickly demonstrated that he was in error. Omalu is going up against an organization that “owns a day of the week,” to quote Omalu’s boss and mentor, who is played by Albert Brooks with a nice mix of world-weariness and faith. Omalu believes that the NFL will be relieved to learn the results of his study and will put their faith in the inventiveness of the American people to find a solution to the problem. This is not what actually takes place.

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Will Smith gives a lovely performance as Omalu. It is small-scaled and precise, and it is imbued with righteousness without being overtly pious. When Smith gives a performance like that in a movie that isn’t terrible overall (and this movie is pretty good), I’ve noticed that my fellow critics act a little surprised. This is something I’ve noticed in the past. Why is it that way? I have no idea. Even before he starred in his first “serious” film, which was a movie version of the critically acclaimed stage play “Six Degrees of Separation,” it was obvious that he was a talented and adaptable actor. Despite the fact that his career in recent years has admittedly included a lot of work in which he more or less merely has to “be Will Smith,” this has not necessarily led to a decrease in the quality of his chops. Rather, it has merely broadened his scope of experience. Alec Baldwin plays a former team doctor who is both disturbed and stimulated by Dr. Omalu’s findings and who tries to build a bridge between Dr. Omalu and the stonewalling NFL, an effort that ends in teeth-grinding frustration. He is also surrounded by expert players, including Alec Baldwin, who plays a former team doctor who is both disturbed and stimulated by Dr. Omalu’s findings.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Concussion quiz.

Additionally, Omalu’s private life is depicted in the film. You know that feeling when you have no social life because you’re dedicated to your work and your church, and some of the church elders ask you to provide a room from a recent immigrant from overseas, and that immigrant turns out to look exactly like Gugu Mbatha-Raw? You know that feeling. No, I don’t either. But this is exactly what takes place with Smith’s character, and before long, Mbatha-Prema Raw’s becomes something more than just a roommate for him. The refreshing delicacy and respect with which the movie deals with the couple’s relationship and their strong faith is exemplified in this film. As hostility toward Omalu and his findings continues to grow, Mbatha-Raw transforms Prema into more than just a long-suffering helpmate.

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The majority of the film’s running time is spent in a manner that is both interesting and captivating. The editing, which was done by Oscar winner William Goldenberg (he won for “Argo,” and he also put together “Zero Dark Thirty,” for which he was also nominated), is brisk and inventive, and it manages to inject excitement into montages in which Omalu is doing nothing more heart-pounding than looking at a bunch of slides. As soon as Omalu notices that fans, players, and even the football industry itself are giving him the very aggressive side-eye, the narrative starts to become a little more muddled. The film doesn’t pull any punches when it comes to suggesting that NFL commissioner Roger Goodell (who is portrayed in the film by Luke Wilson) is a corporate weasel and liar. The movie, I suppose, can’t just come out and SAY that the NFL is willing and able to do stuff that skirts “Parallax View” and “Three Days of the Condor territory. Things become more hazy as certain bad things begin to happen around Omalu and his colleagues and his wife. I thought that this possibly unintentional restraint worked to the movie’s advantage; the fact that the drama was not ratcheted up in any way made the story feel more true and honest. The real story is, in a sense, how Dr. Omalu’s faith in the beneficence of certain organizations was put to the test, and how, in spite of everything that happened, he chose not to become a cynic. Near the end of the film, he is referred to as an American hero, and the truth of that phrase, in addition to all of the contradictions that follow in its wake, are keenly felt by the audience.

For more personality quizzes check this: Masterminds Quiz.

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