Zack Snyder has always been obsessed with heroes. And whether it’s the unlikely heroes of Rebel Moon and Army of the Dead or his stint in the DC Universe, that obsession always comes out in his work. But to see how deeply the themes of mythological heroes run in his films, you have to go all the way back to the beginning of his career and the first movie he ever made, a Michael Jordan docu-fiction hybrid called Playground. It’s available for digital rental or purchase on Prime Video (or you can find it on YouTube).
The movie follows a young kid who gets cut from his high school basketball team and wanders, dejected, to a local playground, where he meets a seemingly supernatural Michael Jordan. While the kid is ostensibly the main character of the movie, it’s all setup for Jordan to recount his own creation myth.
A mythmaking movie about Jordan is a natural fit: He’s one of the greatest sports heroes of the last 50 years. But what makes Snyder’s film so spectacular is it’s also a called-shot. The movie was released in 1990, and shot before that. That’s just six years into Jordan’s illustrious NBA career, and a year before the first of his six NBA titles. Improbably, it’s still the kind of origin story worthy of the greatest, most dominant player the sport has ever seen.
See, Jordan explains, he too was cut from his varsity team. His greatness at the University of North Carolina even went underappreciated, as he was passed over by two teams in the NBA draft (the Rockets’ pick of fellow all-time superstar Hakeem Olajuwon was justifiable, but the Trail Blazers will never live down picking trivia tidbit Sam Bowie over Jordan). It’s all true, but it’s also all classic Snyder. Like the origins of his Superman in Man of Steel,
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