Monkeypaw Productions ventures into new territory with Him while revisiting some familiar cinematic landscapes. It's a fresh idea to tackle football and athletic ambition while highlighting the darker side of the world of sports. Previous hybrid endeavors such as this have included bowling with Gutterballs and last year's Night Swim, but American Football is not often touched by this genre.
It is a perfect breeding ground for the fears one faces in competitive games and the greedy people who hold the purse strings. Producer Jordan Peele and director Justin Tipping are well aware of this from the jump and have gathered a well-equipped team to make it happen.
The story follows a young buck named Cameron Cade who is determined to excel as a quarterback and become the greatest of all time or GOAT. He is convinced to learn more under the tutelage of retired San Antonio Saviors' star Isaiah White and is sequestered in a private compound to train. Grounds rules include no cell phones and absolutely no GrindR. Can one even imagine a life with sacrifices such as this? Things grow worse by the day and the story is divided into stylized daily chapters of the journey. Like many graphic and gory flicks, this one leads up to a grizzly end where good and evil is ultimately tested.