I stayed up late to finish watching the last dance.
To be fair, Jordan is a brand of basketball shoes to me. I don't have Jordan in my life - when Jordan entered the NBA in 1984, my parents and my mother didn't know each other, let alone me, Bulls 91 I finally had me when I started winning the championship ring in 2009, but I was just a 1-year-old fool. So this documentary looks extraordinarily powerful, as if it's been with the Bulls for 10 years, and for that alone, I'm willing to give it five stars.
As a documentary produced by Jordan himself, the content inevitably has a certain orientation - rationalizing Jordan's personality, omitting some stains, and finally instilling a concept of invincibility for everyone - I seem to have been successfully instilled.
As the greatest basketball player in history, Jordan has no doubts about his talent, and his competitiveness and competitive spirit are also extremely high. mad at you! Don't say hello to me before the game? mad at you! Manager secretly approaching you? mad at you! In short, if you don't accept it, just do it, whoever bbs is finished! Of course, the reason why all geniuses become geniuses is 99% of the sweat, and he also paid a lot. Many players in the film interviewed that Jordan was strict and rude to his teammates during training, but they also said that Jordan never asked his teammates to do things that he didn't do himself, which is evident. During this period, Jordan retired for a short time and went to play baseball, and he also achieved good results.
In addition to talking about many important events of Jordan himself, this documentary also interspersed well with the 6 finals match points from 1991 to 1998, showing how the Chicago Bulls went from a garbage team to a dynasty step by step. To be fair, if I were a citizen of Chicago at the time, my blood would have boiled over every day - nothing beats the invincibility of my home team! (Probably the state of our Dalian Shide period, a little bit~
Looking at the Bulls in detail, except for Jordan, every character is also very personal. The manager who looks crooked and squinted and seems to have a ghost idea all the time (it's a pity that he didn't appear in the documentary as an extremely important character), the team owner who has no expression or even a voice, brings everyone to Indian Zen Xiu's coach, and some role players with a lot of inner drama. The deepest impression must be Pippen and Rodman, the second-in-command of the team who don't seem to be very smart, the rebounding king who acts in his wild and unquestioned strength, and Jordan, who has the halo of the protagonist, this configuration is really like a cartoon! It's really nice! (Later, I saw that someone really asked Inoue Takehiko Sakuragi Flower Road is the prototype of Rodman, interesting.
I wrote so much without knowing it, but I really envy that era, and I regret not being able to experience it for myself. Of course, my era is also good, whether the Lakers or the Warriors are new dynasties! Kobe Bryant, James Ye Hao, are new leaders! (Well, I don't like James anyway, slightly~
above! Go and see!
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