Michael Jordan Movie 'Air' Has Everything But MJ, But It Is A Fun ...
In the 1975 classic “Jaws” that started the summer blockbuster craze, you don’t see the shark until nearly an hour into the movie.
In the 2023 “Air” about Michael Jordan’s first shoe contract, you never see Jordan’s jaws or face. Only the actor’s back. There are clips of the real Jordan, but no speaking parts by an actor playing MJ. Of course, who could?
I kept waiting for him to appear or say something, but it doesn’t happen. Mainly we see Matt Damon’s newly created gut and some bad clothes on him. This included a Members Only jacket – a 1980s staple that followed the leisure suit from the 1970s into fashion oblivion. By the late ’80s, the slick, light jackets had few wearing members.
Even without Jordan on screen, his presence is everywhere, though he is still years away from the iconic superstar and global brand he would become with the Chicago Bulls throughout six championships in the 1990s.
“Air” began streaming at 12 a.m. Friday on Amazon Prime Video after a five-week run in theaters across the country.
Matt Damon Plays Nike’s Sonny Vacarro “Really Well”Damon plays Nike marketing executive Sonny Vaccaro, a basketball talent guru who founded the ABCD Camp for elite high school basketball recruits in 1984. He is also known for starting the Dapper Dan Classic national high school All-Star game in 1965.
Vaccaro, now 83, signed Jordan away from Adidas to Nike in a monumental upset in the summer of 1984 after the Chicago Bulls drafted Jordan third in the NBA Draft first round out of North Carolina. This was a time when the NBA finals were on tape delay, and guards like Jordan were an afterthought. The first two picks of the ’84 draft were center Akeem Olajuwon to Houston and center Sam Bowie to Portland.
“Matt Damon played Sonny really well,” ESPN basketball broadcasting legend Dick Vitale told OutKick Thursday night. “I am very good friends with Sonny, and the intense personality of Sonny was played to perfection by Damon.”
Converse, which had a successful “Limousines For the Feet” ad in the 1970s, was the No. 1 athletic shoe company in the world in 1984 out of Massachusetts with a 54 percent market share, according to the film. Converse was the shoe of the NBA, too.
Former LSU basketball player and SEC basketball TV analyst Joe “String Music” Dean was at Converse for 30 years as a top sales executive and vice-president of promotions. But he lost the “sneaker wars” to Vacarro and others, and soon left Converse as Jordan’s Nike shoes skyrocketed, becoming LSU’s athletic director in 1987.
Adidas. of Bavaria, Germany, was second with a 29 percent share in 1984, but rising, and the favored shoe of Jordan.
Michael Jordan Went With Underdog NikeNike, a fledgling company in Beaverton, Oregon, known more at the time for jogging shoes, was at 17 percent sales. Damon’s buddy Ben Affleck plays eccentric Nike co-founder Phil Knight all the way down to Knight’s signature barefeet on his desk.
“Black people don’t jog,” says still-hilarious actor/comedian Chris Tucker, who plays Nike executive Howard White. The former Maryland star wants to help Vacarro expand Nike to the black market more.
“No black person is going to run 26 miles for no reason,” Tucker claims.
We see the talented Jason Bateman in his first role since the fantastic “Ozark” ended a year ago after four amazing seasons on Netflix. Bateman is not nearly as stressed as he was as Marty Byrde in Ozark. How could he be? But he is still somewhat stressed as Nike marketing director Rob Strasser, who does not give Vacarro much of a chance to net Jordan.
Strasser was later credited with revolutionizing sports marketing while making Nike the No. 1 shoe company in the world via Jordan before leaving in 1987. He became CEO for rival Adidas until his death of a heart attack at age 46 in 1993.
The Air Jordan brand now represents $4 billion in sales annually for Nike.
Michael Jordan’s Mom Is The ‘Air’ Of The MovieThis is a sports movie about the shoe of the greatest NBA player of all time that hit theaters on April 5 just as the NCAA Tournament was ending, and the NBA Playoffs that never end were about to get started. But it is also off to Prime Video just in time for Mother’s Day weekend. And that fits.
We don’t see Michael Jordan, but we sure see and hear from his mother Deloris Jordan, played by Oscar winner Viola Davis (Fences, 2016). Deloris strongly directs the courting of her son, and Damon’s Vacarro learns what so many college basketball recruiters know – recruit the mom first.
The key strategy, according to the movie, that gets MJ to Adidas is a percentage of each Air Jordan sold going to Michael Jordan. This was unheard of at the time, and Vacarro did not think it would be approved by the Nike board.
“Maybe that needs to change,” Mrs. Jordan says. “He deserves a piece. A shoe is just a shoe until my son steps inside it.”
Affleck’s Knight later tells a worried Vacarro, “Let’s do it.”
Cute, since the Nike slogan would become “Just Do It” in 1988.
And Affleck adds, “You’re remembered for the rules you break.”
‘Air’ Ends With A Mother’s Day CardSome of this is Hollywood’s patented “based on truth.” But Jordan did say in “The Last Dance” Netflix documentary that his mother told him to visit with Nike after he said he wouldn’t.
“She told me, ‘You’re going to go listen to them. Even if you don’t like it, you’re going to go listen to them,'” Jordan said.
“He didn’t want to go to Nike, that’s for sure,” Vaccaro said on the Dan Patrick Show on March 22. “Family was what guided Michael. After the first meeting, I knew that the only way to Michael’s heart was his family. And Michael Jordan only listened to family and mom. No question.”
Jordan also listened to and was very close to his father, James Jordan, who was murdered in 1993.
Jordan would learn to fly in those Air Jordans, and the money flew in for himself and Nike, which was hoping to make $3 million in the first year. Air Jordans made $162 million that first year. In 2003, Nike bought Converse.
When Patrick asked Vacarro if Jordan made Nike or Nike made Jordan, Vacarro said:
“Jordan made everything.”
And Jordan always thanked mom, who is 81 today, for everything.
“She’s an unbelievable woman,” the real Jordan says at an awards ceremony in 2009 as the “Air” credits roll. “She tries to keep me focused on the good things about life – how people perceive you, how you respect them, what’s good for the kids. That all came from my parents. I’m 46 years old, and she’s still parenting me today. And that’s a good thing about that lady. I love her to death.”