Will Smith In Concussion (Photo Credit – Prime Video)

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Will Smith found himself in unfamiliar territory in Concussion, where he played Dr. Bennet Omalu, a Nigerian pathologist whose name may not resonate through the pop culture landscape like Ali or Hancock, but whose contributions certainly cut deeper than any uppercut or laugh line.

This wasn’t the loud, swagger-filled Will Smith type of role. This was a man stripped of spotlight, playing another man buried in bureaucracy and this role might be the boldest biopic of Smith’s career, not because it was grand but because it was quiet.

The Real-Life Tragedy That Sparked Concussion

The story begins in the rust-belt heart of Pittsburgh, where a broken football legend, Mike Webster, is found dead in the shell of a truck. Apparently, it was years of confusion, pain, and mental decay that had reduced him from Hall of Famer to homeless man. Omalu, a soft-spoken, methodical coroner, is the one who finds something no one else had, and it was signs in the brain that told a new story, one that many didn’t want to hear.

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