Radio is the kind of movie some critics might call the "feel-good movie of the year," and it would be a fair assessment. When Coach Jones asks the mentally disabled Radio to help him coach the high school football team, he brings him into the small community of Anderson, S.C., and most--although not all--folks embrace him. That lets the audience "feel good" about how considerate, kind and compassionate we all have the potential to be--and it doesn't just feel good, it feels great. Until, that is, the jerk in the back row of the theater refuses to either answer or turn off his cell phone, which has been playing "Turkey in the Straw" at high volume for five minutes, and we are sorely tempted to run back there and drop-kick him through the screen. Now that would feel good. But both the audience and the cast have much to learn from the good-hearted Radio about kindness to one's enemies. Given his fixation with radios of all kinds, he would probably hug the cell phone owner and take great joy in his obnoxious gadget. And as in life, so goes the film. Even though some folks don't cotton to the idea of a handicapped adult black male hanging around a high school (yes, his race is relevant to the film--this is South Carolina in 1976, after all), Radio's good-hearted nature eventually overcomes most of their objections.