LeBron Jamesâ story is proof that the people around you matter just as much as the journey.
This journey is depicted in Peacock’s new biopic film, Shooting Stars.
It follows the early years of LeBron James and his catapult to stardom throughout his high school career alongside the âFab Five,â his core group of friends and their coach who all still remain close to this day.
âThe film is representing that basketball is more than a game,â said Caleb McLaughlin, who plays Dru Joyce III. âItâs about friendship. And to me, itâs very spiritual. Like when they werenât good, how it affected their game. When LeBron was drinking, how it affected his game, you know what I mean? It really represents that itâs not just about dribbling a basketball and putting it in the rim, itâs bigger than that.â
âI think itâs all about the village,â said director Chris Robinson. âLeBron James is this superhuman, superhero iconic person whoâs reached amazing heights in his chosen sport. What really attracted me to the movie to begin with that is that we all go through this experience, right? We all have friends and we all have this village, where itâs great and if you wish there was a better village, we all have this process in life. And I think that when youâre on the same page when the reasons that youâre doing it are right, you can get results like what we see with LeBron James. And just the fact that he and all of his friends are still brothers.â
For Avery âAJâ Wills, who portrays Willie McGee, his hope is for a larger message about brotherhood to resonate with younger generations.
âI definitely think it will teach them that you canât do it alone,â he said. âI donât think itâs going to tell you that you have to find your friends, or you have to find this type of friend. Itâs just whoever youâre with [and] whoever youâve been around your whole life. It just shows the path and the journey that they took together. And as teammates, basketball brings a big impact to brotherhood and friendship. The film is just gonna basically give an idea of the brotherhood and the friends that the Fab Five share.â
Khalil Everage, who portrays Sian Cotton, echoes that sentiment.
âThe togetherness and being able to stick together when we see that a lot,” he said. “It was just Black love and Black love with friends. Iâm kind of big on friendship and big standing ten toes with my brothers.â
Furthermore, Sterling âScootâ Henderson says that the friendship groupâs decision to welcome his character Romeo with open arms speaks to how much deeper it is than basketball.Â
âThem just fighting through their adversity was a huge thing for the team,â he recalled. âAnd just showing that they can get it done together and they donât to go their own way. They donât have to try to be selfish, because it was never that. Since they were younger and with Romeo joining. He came in and they got better as a team and kind of came into a collective agreement to where itâs together or nothing.â
And none of this would be possible without Coach Dru (Wood Harris), the man who brought them all together.
âI hope Coach Dru depicts, first of all, a father who also mentors other. Like, a strong, compassionate person with strength and compassion who had a hurdle dealing with a giant like LeBron James, who just ascends right in front of you,â Harris shared. âYou might not know what to do with that type of energy. And so I just know Coach Dru, in real life, heâs such a great person. I hope people gathered that from this film. I hope they understand that he had a lot to do with nurturing all those boys. Their ideology is nurtured through their interaction with Coach Dru.â
Universal Pictures’ Shooting Stars is now streaming on Peacock.
