Part 1 – Part 2 – Part 3 – Part 4
The movie the least suited to the ongoing theme for this year's film reviews, Space Jam: A New Legacy is the reason why I specify “Trapped in a virtual world” rather than “Trapped in a game”. However, there is a major link to video games in its plot, which means that by my metrics, it counts to be reviewed here.
Hare Jordan and Aerospace Jordan, both advertising Nike’s Air Jordan shoes. Chance meetings eventually led to a Nike executive being given the idea by Ivan Reitman for a feature-length film with the same formula. The plans were halted by Jordan’s retirement from basketball in 1993 to try baseball, but resumed when the athlete returned to the sport in 1995, with the commercials’ director, Joe Pytka, directing the film. Despite a… tumultuous production, shall we say, the film was finished and released to theaters on November 15th, 1996. The film hilariously implied that the Looney Tunes were responsible for Jordan going back to basketball.
Talks of a sequel happened immediately, but miscommunications caused those plans to be changed, then scrapped. The poor performance of Looney Tunes: Back in Action at the box-office was another nail in the coffin… until new talks arose in 2014, this time centering the film around LeBron James, another of the biggest basketball stars of all time (I know very little about sports and even I knew of the guy!), and with Malcolm D. Lee in the director’s chair. Filming started in July of 2019 and ended in March 2020, right before the Covid-19 pandemic got really bad; but since all that remained was animation, production wasn’t hindered by the world-changing event. The finished film was released to theaters on July 16th, 2021.
Much of what I have to say is tied to the film’s plot itself – so why not cover it, and get to my talking points when they come up? Also – why call this A New Legacy when, aside from two mentions, there’s no link between the two films?
From child to superstar
The film opens in 1998 in Akron, Ohio, where a young LeBron James is dropped off at a basketball match by his supportive mom. He is a big fan of the Looney Tunes, as evidenced by his backpack. So although he should be focusing on the game, his attention is diverted when his best friend Malik shows up with a present: An old Game Boy with a Looney Tunes game cartridge in it.
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| Oh hey, that's The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle! |
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| Young LeBron James (portrayed by Stephen Kankole). |
Cue the opening credits, playing over archival footage of the athlete’s rise to stardom. His career starting at the Cleveland Cavaliers, passing by Miami Heat, returning to Cleveland, only to finally settle in Los Angeles in 2018 to play with the Lakers.
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| Everything is work between these lines? What tells you that your two kids want to work on their free time, Mr. James? |
Algorithm
Meanwhile in Burbank, next door to LA, something is happening at Warner Brothers. Several floors underground, within the studio’s servers, exists a digital world: The Serververse, which contains copies of all the worlds of IPs owned by the company. It is overseen by an artificial intelligence (y’know, how we imagined AIs before recent years) that goes by Al-G Rhythm (Don Cheadle). The sentient algorithm’s task at the studio is to come up with new ideas. He has found something, but he needs the right celebrity to push that idea to the executives, and he thinks he has found it: LeBron James. Al-G confides in his assistant, a flying creature named Pete that speaks in electronic noises, that he seeks validation from the humans that own him, and he hopes that his new idea will make them respect him at last.
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| Al-G looks relatively reasonable in his quest for recognition, but hoooo boy does he go off the deep end. |
We return to the James household, where we see Dom working. He uses a special software to take 360° videos of statues, tarantulas and other stuff, to digitize them into 3D models. I doubt that’s how it normally works, but we need an excuse for the later parts of the story. He’s already got models from famous players. Meanwhile, he receives an ad for the E3 camp, but he quickly pulls it from his screen when LeBron walks in.
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| Come on now LeBron, if you want realistic basketball in gaming, I'm sure you can find more accurate simulators out there. Your son's creating games to have fun! |
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| Uh oh! This looks like a pretty nasty glitch, too. Never heard of a glitch that erases its character, though. |
To lift his son’s spirits, LeBron invites him to come to WB studios; he was invited there as execs have a great idea to share with the star player. They head there with LeBron's friend Malik (Khris Davis).
The “Idea”
LeBron, Dom and Malik meet with WB executives. Al-G appears to them as a 2D-animated figure, presenting Warner 3000, stating he wants “King James” to be the leading face of the project. In short: His likeness will be digitized, and can then be used in all kinds of roles and movies. Al-G shows examples, sticking the basketball player into the Batman universe, Game of Thrones, and Harry Potter.
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| Considering what a fucking mess of a sport Quidditch is (whatever I can reember of it, anyway), I assume an athlete like LeBron would utterly HATE playing it. |
…Holy shit that’s a bad idea. LeBron is more polite, but shares the sentiment, unaware that Al-G. is spying on the meeting through the security cameras. He says that his real place is on a basketball court, that athletes going into acting is usually a disaster. Allow me to mention that LeBron James’ performance is one of the most derided and mocked aspects of this film, and that it even earned him two Razzie Awards. And the same was said of Michael Jordan in the original Space Jam. So, y’know, he may be on to something here. But if it were me, I think I would have stretched that another minute – really lay it on thick that he shouldn’t be in movies. Stretch that joke to the point the audience asks why they even went to the theater for this. I now the plot requires a basketball star to happen, but even in-universe, it IS a terrible idea. If Al-G was so smart he would have chosen an actual actor to start with, and it’s not like there’s a shortage of famous names here. And if the algorithm wanted to focus on a Black, male actor, well, there are many big names there too! Daniel Kaluuya, Michael B. Jordan, Keith David, Will Smith, Jamie Foxx, Laurence Fishburne, Idris Elba, need I add more?
…Sorry, I try to keep a lid on that, but… sometimes, I just need to vent. Shit fucking sucks lately. Aaaanyway!
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| Dom really shoulld have told him earlier about the E3 camp. (Also, it feels super weird to know that E3 would shut down merely two years after this film's release.) |
Trapped in the Serververse
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| Back in my day, virtualization required scanners, a quantum computer, nuclear power, and the ability to rewind time. None of that spherical thingamabob! |
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| Scary computer man! |
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| LeBron may think basketball is very serious business, but even he has never played a match with such stakes. |
But hey, he’s gonna give LeBron a chance to build a basketball team… By tossing him to Tune World. The player is sent flying through the Warner Bros. universe, with properties represented by planets. He passes by:
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| Just zoomin' by! |
-Westeros (allegedly had a longer scene planned, but it was scrapped following the poor reaction to the HBO show’s final season);
-Casablanca;
-Harry Potter (Rowling had already revealed her bigotry when this film came out, I am glad there isn’t any sequence in that world);
-Wizard of Oz (not visited, but could have been fun);
-The Matrix;
-Before reaching Tune World, passing through the Tune Rings and crash-landing onto the planet.
LeBron emerges from a Nike logo-shaped crater (because we can’t avoid jokes about brands in a movie about basketball, come on now), to realize he got turned into a cartoon. But! It comes with all the perks of being a cartoon: He’s effectively unkillable and can injure himself without any damage. Over Tune World is a timer counting down, giving the star 24 hours to assemble his team to face the algorithm.
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| "I feel like I had an entire dimension robbed from me! I've only got two left!" |
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| Maybe it's nostalgia, or my age, speaking, but 2D animation like this almost feels... cozy, in a weird kind of way. |
Tune World is empty. Not a character in sight. In the forest, LeBron pulls a Duck Season poster and says “Rabbit Season?” aloud. Oh, you could have just hummed “Shave and a Haircut”! LeBron is chased by burrowing ground, from which pops Bugs Bunny.
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| You okay thee buddy? You're looking a little more... ...crazy than usual. |
Oh hey, I’m running long today – tell you what, how about we resume in Part 2?





















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