Fresh Air - A Courtside Look At NBA Legends, From Jordan To Kobe

Episode Date: December 11, 2025

Legendary NBA head coach Phil Jackson and sports journalist Sam Smith talk about the stars who helped define the sport, including Jordan, Kobe, and Shaq. They spoke with Tonya Mosley about their new b...ook, 'Masters of the Game.'Also, Justin Chang shares his picks for the 10 best films of 2025. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This message comes from Bayer. Science is a rigorous process that requires questions, testing, transparency, and results that can be proven. This approach is integral to every breakthrough Bayer brings forward. Innovations that save lives and feed the world. Science Delivers.com This is fresh air. I'm Tanya Mosley. You ever sit down with someone, start talking, and suddenly hours have passed because the stories are just that good? That's what happened during the pandemic when long time.
Starting point is 00:00:30 sports writer Sam Smith drove up to see Phil Jackson at his place in Montana. They talk players, they'd known, games they've lived through, the legends, the troublemakers, and the geniuses. Phil Jackson, of course, is the coach with 11 NBA championships, more than anyone in history. He coached Michael Jordan and Scotty Pippen, Kobe, and Shaq, and before all that, he played 13 seasons in the league, making him one of the few living bridges between what the NBA used to to be and what it's become. And as a long-time sports writer, Sam Smith, has been watching almost as long, from the smoky balcony of the Madison Square Garden on a 75-cent student pass to four decades on press row. He wrote The Jordan Rules, an inside account of the Chicago Bulls' first
Starting point is 00:01:18 championship season that examined the team's dynamics on and off the court. Their new book together is called Masters of the Game, which is less of a rankings book than it is a preservation project. an attempt to capture what made certain players unforgettable, the kind of greatness Phil saw up close, and Sam chronicled for years. And Phil Jackson and Sam Smith, welcome to fresh air. Thank you, looking forward to it. It's a list of the masters of the game,
Starting point is 00:01:48 but it's also a real history lesson on the NBA in general, taking us all the way back to the 40s, to the beginnings. I mean, some really funny stories that, like, smoking inside of the locker room. There used to be smokeboys who would have cigarettes waiting for the players. Also, the game was a small man's game, which today just seems unbelievable, because, I mean, it is definitely a big man's game, you know? These guys were proficient at the game and what they did, and the era that they played in didn't have the same amount of, you know, high percentage shooting or even the access to the
Starting point is 00:02:32 quality of material. I mean, they played in gyms that were hockey arenas and were converted and, you know, basically we're still just coming out of the cage area when, you know, players played in cages and local churches and, uh, local churches and, ethnic groups had their own teams and there were barnstormers that went around like the original Celtics and, you know, the various people that had played that were predecessors of the NBA era. So those are some of the things that we wanted to get across. Some of these old timers that were really influential in the game having to take a back seat because history has overlooked them.
Starting point is 00:03:22 For modern day folks, younger people would just be really surprised to know that basketball was considered a small man's game back then. And like the average player during that time, they were firemen and mailman. They were just like regular guys. There were talented big men, but there weren't the numbers that there are today. Their size was limited and obviously the court was limiting because of its. depth and the actual lane size and the variety of rules that have changed the game that have made it accessible to the modern player. So that's why it's hard to put a judgment on the modern player versus, you know,
Starting point is 00:04:10 somebody from an era like Oscar Robertson or Jerry West or people from the 60s and late 50s and 60s, Elgin Baylor, that everybody knows. talent-wise, they could have been playing the game today. You know, Phil mentioned before the word cages. When I was growing up in the New York City, seven daily newspapers, two of which I delivered every day, basically. But one of the shorthands for basketball was cagers. That's what they called basketball players were cagers.
Starting point is 00:04:43 And the reason they called them cagers is that the game was so physical and so rough in its early years that they literally played in cages to keep. the fans and the players separated because there was so much violence in the game. And so you talk about evolution of the game. These guys were literally
Starting point is 00:05:02 playing in cages, and that's why they called them cages in the 50s and the 60s. When I told people I was talking to you guys, I mean, like immediately, and again, I want to say like this is people of a certain age, like 40s and up. Immediately
Starting point is 00:05:18 people just said right away, the NBA just isn't the same. I mean, they love to complain. More recently, I just hear that more and more often, that the NBA just isn't the same. And you guys don't exactly shy away from that in the book. There are like little snippets where that comes out. Were you all worried at all about coming across, though, is like two old heads just reminiscing about the good old days? We didn't care. We really didn't care. Right.
Starting point is 00:05:47 That was, that's kind of maybe our brusque nature, but the idea that this game is a competition that's played in narrow parameters and as, you know, used television to make it a spectacle, has grown the game to great proportions where, you know, it's become an international game. And particularly the three-point shot has brought. another sense of this game into play where the idea of shooting a layup or shooting a close shot is not valued as much as shooting a
Starting point is 00:06:29 25 foot shot which has a much lower percentage because obviously there's a point differential so the ideas take advantage of this and it has become the overwhelming
Starting point is 00:06:44 feature in the NBA games However, all the lax rules that have contributed to this has kind of spiked this concept that this is what's the most important thing. It's not about how to set a pick or how do you dribble a basketball or what your footwork or what kind of passes can you make. It's about getting the ball to the guy who's standing open in the corner for a three-point shot. that's become the overwhelming
Starting point is 00:07:16 parameters however the game still relies on penetration that's the number one point of view and in our day in the day of you know playing the game with big men centers and forwards and guards
Starting point is 00:07:36 instead of all ball handers like is kind of played today the idea that you put passes has a priority to the game to use penetration was really the feature. And one of the things that we always remark about in the Golden State era with Steph Curry
Starting point is 00:07:58 and coached by Steve Kerr has been their passing ability. The number of passes that they still make in a half-court setup to get the kind of shot they want to have. And I think that's what's still made the game attractive to the people who love it now
Starting point is 00:08:17 is that people pass and people set it up and there's teamwork that's going on in the competition Phil, as players became multi-millionaires did they get harder to coach? No.
Starting point is 00:08:34 I think they became, I think there's a natural instinct in players to want to be coached. They want to know if you're going to help them be better at what they do and how they can survive and succeed along with their group or their teammates. I think the younger players that are striving to reach that maximum contract have been difficult to coach.
Starting point is 00:09:06 And that's a small group. That's a group of maybe five, ten, young players in each draft class that is sitting in a you know in a hope scenario where they're going to be credited to be a max player at the end of a contract and those you know those tries to become a max player involve not being able to sit on the bench having to be a starter you know a lot of things that coincide with what's best for the team and I think that that youthful 19, 18, 19 year old drive can be too selfish for a team to overcome. I see that the Golden State Warriors are going through something similar to that right now
Starting point is 00:09:57 with one of their players that's highly talented kid, but yet can't quite adjust to being a team mate. You all did kind of give alternate perspectives on certain. people, especially, I don't know if this is a correct observation, but I saw it the most when you talked about contemporary players, like LeBron James, the self-proclaimed king, Phil, you say he's not in your top five of the greatest, although he's a master of the game in the book, and you draw this real distinction between his game and his mentality. Can you talk about what you meant there when you say that? Well, I think, you know, over the years we've watched the, you know, the physical nature of this player who has dominated the game for 20 years and came in as a high school kid and stepped right into, really within three years was, you know, in a situation where he was making a difference.
Starting point is 00:11:11 in the basketball games. Definitely a master of the game. The thing that were disappointing about LeBron were things that turned him into self-reflection, I would call it, or you could see him fold a little bit in the course of a game or in the course of a series. And, you know, the number of series in the finals that he has been a losing part of are painful because I know what that's like to have lost in the finals as a player and as a coach.
Starting point is 00:11:56 These are the things that kind of haunt you. And I think it was kind of haunting. There was a situation in Cleveland where things got disturbing and he had the challenge his love of the game or his ability to. to join his teammates in full participation. And there was a situation in Miami that, you know, became obvious in the playoffs with San Antonio Spurs. And, you know, those are the things that have kind of, you know, remarked about his career where he never saw that happen with,
Starting point is 00:12:31 a Michael Jordan, where, you know, there was a sense of quitting or a sense of defeat. I just want to add every time Michael got there to the finals meaning the opportunity to win a championship he finished it off and LeBron had a great run I think he was in the finals eight times
Starting point is 00:12:52 which is an extraordinary accomplishment but he only finished it off about three or four times and from a writer perspective one of the ways we sort of judge greatness is in basketball I get the old make the right play in team sport and all that
Starting point is 00:13:08 but can you give the ball to somebody and he can finish it off for you and LeBron has never been that kind of player he doesn't like to get to the free throw line at the end of the games because he gets a little nervous at the line we talked about Elvin Hayes was kind of like that one of the great scores in history
Starting point is 00:13:26 but didn't want the ball at the end of the game people are different and some people just don't want that spotlight on him Michael drew the spotlight on him and that provoked him to play even better. This is what so many people admired about Michael Jordan, as he took the blows and went right back to the free to line if he was called a foul and did not complain.
Starting point is 00:13:54 And I think we all kind of admired him for the physicality of the game, which was at that time pretty hairy. The Detroit bad boys were at their prime. and maybe there wasn't as much fighting as there had been in the 70s and 60s, but there was still a lot of physicality that went on that was, you know, targeted players. So this is one of the things that I admired about Michael
Starting point is 00:14:28 was his ability to play. When players were playing four games in five nights at that time, which they don't do anymore, that he could play that fourth game in the fifth night as hard as he played the first game in that series of games in that week. You made a point to say that you never asked him for anything, and that was important for you to note
Starting point is 00:14:51 that you never asked him for anything, like autographs or to join anything. And this was deliberate, almost like a way of building trust. Yeah, I witnessed that with my own group of teammates you know that intense feeling is of being surrounded and being you know assailed with you know requests but this came when we were not at that time on exclusive floors and hotel rooms and we're still staying in the holiday ends and ramadas and so forth I came out of my room which was on the top floor and there were five
Starting point is 00:15:35 people outside of Michael's door. They were all either, you know, baggage people, shafts, cleaning room people, people that were literally looking for this autograph from someone that they admired, that were their own generation, their own family type of situation. And Michael took the time to do that. But when it came to, you know, going in airport. that were still flying commercially at that time. It was almost like he had to go into a private room
Starting point is 00:16:11 to stay out of the public view until the actual gate was opened and the team could go on so that it wasn't overwhelmed by this dramatic appeal for his autograph or to touch him or to be part of it or take a picture. Yeah, but you as his coach, I mean, you identify that for you to have that trust, to build that trust with him, to have that coach-player relationship, this component, this thing of asking him for something, even if it was anything, you made a choice to say, I'm not going to be the one to ask him for anything. How did you know that was really important in building that coach-player relationship, that trust?
Starting point is 00:17:00 I don't know I think it puts you on a different level when you start asking for things it puts you on a beneficial or receivership and when you want to be in an influential space with someone you want not to have that detrimentous that little garbage that little layer between you
Starting point is 00:17:29 You know, that just makes a difference. And I recognize that as something that I felt was important as a leader and a coach. I was around Michael from the beginning when he came to Chicago in 84 and at the draft, Rod Thorne said, look, he's a really good player, but it's not like he's going to change the franchise or something. So it's like, okay, and I watched this development of his, his stages going to. through multiple coaches, a different coach, first three years every year, different players he was playing with. He mentioned in his last dance documentary about its being a roving drug gang, which it was, literally half his teammates from his rookie year went into drug rehab. It was a bad
Starting point is 00:18:17 era for the NBA for that. And one thing with Michael is people wanted stuff from them all the time. And he distrusted if you wanted something from. And I noticed with Phil, that because early on, Michael was very dubious about fail. Yeah, because Phil, I remember when he came in, said, and he pointed out only one player in the last 25 years. Kareem Addozer-Barr had won a championship while leading a league in scoring. Michael was leading, he liked leading and leading scoring. And I remember when Phil got the head coaching job,
Starting point is 00:18:50 I wrote the story. I'm sure Phil didn't like it. I talked to Michael the day Phil got the job and said he was going to institute this offensive triangle and quoted Michael saying, well, I'll give it three games and see how it works. And so, but I did notice that relation to that Phil wasn't asking Michael for the things. He was trying to help him improve. And over the years, that's what I've seen in players. They want two things from a coach, just two things.
Starting point is 00:19:19 I credible, do you know what you're doing? And can you help me be better? And I thought that was really the reason why Phil and then later, you can. Kobe, too, despite issues that they had, really came to trust Phil and more so the system of play, which enabled them to succeed. Our guest today, our legendary NBA coach and former player Phil Jackson, and veteran sports journalist Sam Smith. We'll be right back after a short break.
Starting point is 00:19:48 I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air. This message comes from Wise, the app for using money around the globe. When you manage your money with Wise, you'll always. get the mid-market exchange rate with no hidden fees. Join millions of customers and visit wise.com. T's and C's apply.
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Starting point is 00:21:02 Wherever you get your podcasts. Support for NPR and the following message come from the Lemelson Foundation, dedicated to improving lives through invention, innovation, and climate action. Kobe Bryant, like most who came after Michael Jordan, Kobe was greatly influenced by Jordan. And before we get to your relationship with him, Phil, I want to actually, talk about his significance to the game. Phil, where does Kobe fit for you among the greats? Well, you know, he's in the book and he's one of the guys that's won, you know, five championships, which means something. And he's been, you know, a great score. He's been a big-time player at the end game situation and has made really good decisions.
Starting point is 00:21:57 in competitive, real competitive nature of games. And he's had a big influence on this generation that has followed. Big influence. Your relationship, there's been so much written about it. We watched it, the complexity of it. But Kobe once said that your ability to connect with players was your biggest strength, that you'd study, as we know, psychology and human development and read about how they grew up to figure out how to reach them.
Starting point is 00:22:31 And with Kobe, what did you have to learn to reach him? Well, he's very sensitive, and that he does not take criticism lightly. That he did not want to be compared to Michael, even though his game emulated Michael, down to the fact that he even did a number of physical movements that could only have been influenced by watching come fly with me, which was a important videotape of Michael Jordan's heroics that came out in like 1990 or 89, sometime right around there. And, you know, it just was a huge influence on a kid like Kobe who was, you know, probably 10, 11, 12 years of age where boys are, you know, gravitating towards what they can do well.
Starting point is 00:23:24 and this is something that he knew he could do really well. So his game was to compete on a level that was comparable to Michael Jordans. And when he first came into playing for the Lakers when I was coaching, it was not the role I was going to perhaps give him. I gave him a lead guard role, which meant he had to set up the floor. He had to, you know, be able to feed Shaq, who was the primary focus of the game. And he had to take the leftovers as part of the game as it came to him. And a lot of times he felt left out of like, I need to explore my own part of the game.
Starting point is 00:24:18 So that's where initially we had to be juggling things a little bit between each. other. So he had to kind of face that and figured it out and figured out how to do it. And eventually I moved him into a role that was very similar to Michael Jordans, which gave him much more latitude in the game as we became adapted to using a guy named Lamar Otom, a guard, a six to nine forward, it became a lead guard or an off guard. We had a two guard front. So, yeah, there was room for him to grow and for me to accommodate. Yeah. One of the things you discovered, well, unlike Jordan,
Starting point is 00:25:04 you discovered that he was a big reader, Harry Potter and Fantasy and Wizards. How did that change things as far as your relationship when you discovered that? Well, I'd carried him about, you know, the statement he wanted to be captain of the team. He was 22. I was like, well, you don't go out with the players. The players tell me you stay in the room all the time. You watch tape of the game last night that you played. You're not interested in the conversations that they're having.
Starting point is 00:25:38 And, you know, if you want to be a leader, you need to, you know, really rub shoulders with your teammates. And he was like, well, you know, they're into hubcaps and their cars and the girls and clubs and rap music. And, you know, those aren't the passions that I have right now. Basketball is my focus. So I could see that. But so I started, you know, giving him books like the leadership books,
Starting point is 00:26:04 the leadership of, you know, Winnie the Pooh and the Dow of Leadership and, you know, some books that were, you know, kind of like just talking about, you know, growing into the role that he was going to play. And one of the things about basketball that's happened is, is in the days when players matriculated out of college or their college class matriculated into the NBA, players played three, four years in NCAA in college. As they went through their college years,
Starting point is 00:26:41 they grew into a leadership role. And suddenly the NBA started getting players that were either before they went to college is the result of Kobe Bryant and Kevin Garnett and some other players that came in the game prior to even going to college. And so they never assumed or grew into a role of leadership. And that was one of the things I was concerned about with Kobe.
Starting point is 00:27:09 But he became a really good leader and took it to heart. Is it right that you went to see Kobe at his office in Orange County a week before he died? Yeah. Yeah. What did you guys talk about? We talked about the good times. We talked about some of the things about basketball. Talked about his kids that he was coaching,
Starting point is 00:27:35 coaching a girls' team of basketball where Gigi was part and really a dominant player in that world of that league. Talked about his traversing from Orange County up into the valley into Westlake. you know, taking helicopters and, you know, that world that he knew a little bit because he used helicopters to travel from L.A.X, the airport in L.A. down to Orange County after we come in at 2 in the morning. So, you know, he had confidence. And, you know, it was heartbreak for us. that were close to him and literally a family of
Starting point is 00:28:26 girls and a wife that had really been with him since he was a 20 year old so yeah it was tragic and yet his legacy is I think it's really shown up I mean it's
Starting point is 00:28:41 it's been played out and you know young players are carrying him forward and using his example of hard work and tenaciousness and competitiveness to their advantage. You know, Kobe wasn't always beloved by the media. Of course, all of those things that happened, the charges, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:06 it really set the course right at a time when his star was rising. But then things shifted by the end. And what did you see as a reporter, as a journalist covering it, you know, seeing that full circle right before he died. Well, part of it is you see on TV still. I mean, I don't know if who endorses more products, Shaq or Peyton Manning, but they pretty much endorse everything between the two of them. And Shaq was this incredibly popular figure with media.
Starting point is 00:29:41 And when he had this, you referred to it too, to falling out, rivalry with Kobe those couple of years that eventually led the Shaq's trade. and we've, Phil talked about that, and we've talked about that. You know, it's NBA story, or I wrote about it, Phil witnessed at first hand try to litigate it. But Shaq literally, because he, and he was so popular, he literally went to reporters at the time. I remember I was among those, and he asked you to choose sides. Actually, I chose Kobe. I was one of the few who kind of sided with Kobe, right?
Starting point is 00:30:14 What do you mean choose sides? If you weren't going to write a nice, you know, treat me, be my, you know, be sort of in my, and then reporters end up doing that. You don't want to do it. You want to create, you know, maintain independence and most everybody did. And Shaq verbalized that I heard. It was verbalized to me too as well as, you know, you're either with me, sort of against me. And so, you know, I admired Kobe more because he was serious about the game.
Starting point is 00:30:40 You know, Shaq would, as Phil knew too, understood, I'm sure it was frustrating. He'd sort of spend the season getting in shape. He came to the playoffs. He could average 40 and 20. Yeah, in his hotel room, watching plays. Yeah. Yeah. He could have been the best player in history.
Starting point is 00:30:56 He was so physically dominant. If Shaq took the game seriously, nobody could have competed with him. Kobe took the game seriously because he wasn't as physically talented. His hand wasn't as big like Jordan. He couldn't palm the ball like that and dominate the game. And so you sort of had to make a distinction, and I kind of sort of gravitated over toward Kobe's side. Yeah. Let's take a short break. If you're just joining us, we're talking with Phil Jackson and Sam Smith about their new book, Masters of the Game, a reflection of 75 defining players in NBA history. We'll be right back after a break. This is fresh air.
Starting point is 00:31:36 During the holidays, there's a lot of pressure to make things perfect, but that can actually make the season less merry and bright. And I remember thinking, oh my gosh, in all the doing, I am not here, I'm not present, I am missing being. This week, on the Life Kit podcast from the NPR network. Tips to make your holiday season actually enjoyable. Listen in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. On the TED Radio Hour, for over two decades, Krista Tippett has been helping her listeners get through change. But she was going through her own life crisis
Starting point is 00:32:08 when something unexpected happened. I fell in love at 64, and it's the greatest thing ever. Finding your bliss. Listen to the TED Radio Hour on the NPR PR app or wherever you get your podcasts. You know, I can't help but see the history of race in America interwoven into these conversations between the two of you. I think about Phil when you first started as a player. You know, it wasn't long after the league was integrated. So you weren't there with these players
Starting point is 00:32:42 hearing stories from them. A lot of these players shared their racial traumas with you. You saw it firsthand. You and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, one of the masters of the game listed in the book, had an interesting relationship when you played together because you talked religion and history and jazz, but you also got into race. Phil, you know you've been called out over the years for comments that critics say kind of reveal your discomfort with black culture. Scotty Pippen said some things about you that a lot of people stood up and said, like, we don't believe this. this is not true, but he called you a racist. I mean, how do you receive that stuff
Starting point is 00:33:23 when you reflect on your time and the comments that you've made over the decades? Well, I can't recall any of the comments I made that have been controversial, but certainly that is a difficult, you know, thing to hold up with. That, you know, once you call a racist, it becomes like a label
Starting point is 00:33:47 and you don't live away from it or you don't overcome it by saying no some of my best friends are black you know that's not how you do it you know there's no redeeming value in that particular thing but it was an incident
Starting point is 00:34:06 that was an incident in which Scotty didn't get the opportunity and he was kind of lashing on about an incident in which you know was a basketball reaction and a basketball decision that I made. But one of the joys of being able to play in the NBA has been able to the relationship and the teammates that I've been able to play with
Starting point is 00:34:36 that have come from all diverse groups of people. And the African-American kids that have grown up in certain situations that have been trials like Walt Fraser grew up in buttermilk bottoms in Atlanta and you know his dad was a numbers guy and he had all sisters around him growing up and there was a certain kind of depore or repore that he had with the community because of it and you know Earl Monroe, seeing someone killed in his neighborhood growing up as a kid. And, you know, those things leave remarkable images and damages to your soul and heart. And so for me, being a kid growing up in Montana and North Dakota,
Starting point is 00:35:36 these were experiences I could only relate to as, you know, unique experiences that were tribulations and trials that people overcame. They were heroes. They were really something very special to come and have that ability to play. What's something from this book, from your lives covering or being in the NBA or being a coach in the NBA, that you want a young fan in 50 years maybe to hold on to? Because you've now written this book that is now a chronicle. You know, it's a piece of history that we can now look back on.
Starting point is 00:36:18 My point would be sort of the history, sort of to appreciate what and who has come before you, what they achieved, how they went about it, and sort of learn from it and respect it. And, you know, that's kind of what I did. I mean, obviously it was a joy, spending time with Phil and being able to share all these memories and the history.
Starting point is 00:36:38 And I think, you know, that's sort of the fun of it. but also to appreciate, you know, what those who've preceded you went through and had to overcome those obstacles you even related to before to help, you know, get a sort of to stand on the shoulders of the past kind of thing. Nice, Sam. Yeah, and I would say, Tonya, that it's been my privilege to be in the NBA around the people in the NBA. and to have played with teammates that have won championships and have coached players that have been desirous of being unselfish,
Starting point is 00:37:24 cooperative, and desires of competing at a high level and accepting the coaching and the instructions and the lifestyle and culture that somehow surrounded them when I've been in their presence. Phil Jackson and Sam Smith, thank you both. You're welcome. Thank you. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:37:49 Phil Jackson and Sam Smith, their new book, Masters of the Game, is a reflection on 75 defining players and NBA history. Coming up, film critic Justin Chang tells us his favorite films of the year, this is fresh air. Film critic Justin Chang spent a lot of time this year, watching movies at festivals and theaters and on his couch. He says that, contrary to what popular opinion or gloomy box office headlines may tell us, 2025 has been the strongest year for new movies in a long time.
Starting point is 00:38:23 Here's Justin's list of the best films of the year. Anyone will tell you that these are tumultuous, borderline apocalyptic times for the film industry. Box office is down. The threat of AI looms. Billionaires and tech giants are laying waste to what remains of the major Hollywood studios. I'm not entirely sure how to square all this bad news with my own good news, which is that I saw more terrific new movies this year than I have any year since before the pandemic. True, most of those movies weren't from here, but all of them played in U.S. theaters in 2025,
Starting point is 00:39:01 and all of them are well worth seeking out in the weeks and months to come. The best new movie I saw this year is Sirat, a breakthrough work from a gifted Spanish filmmaker named Oliver Lache. It's a nail-biting survival thriller set in the desert of southern Morocco, during what feels like the end times. It's a little madmacks, a little wages of fear, and all in all, the most exhilarating and devastating two hours I experienced in a theater this year. Sirat also features the year's best original score, composed by the electronic musician Kang Ding Ray. The second film on my list is one battle after another, Paul Thomas Anderson's much-loved, much-debated reimagining, of Thomas Pynchon's novel, Vineland. An exuberant mash-up of action thriller and political satire,
Starting point is 00:39:56 it stars Leonardo DiCaprio in one of his best and funniest performances, as an aging revolutionary drawn back into the field. He leads an ensemble that includes Teana Taylor, Benicio del Toro, Sean Penn, Regina Hall, and the terrific discovery, Chase Infinity. In this scene, DiCaprio's character, Bob Ferguson, calls up someone from the French 75, the underground movement he was part of years earlier.
Starting point is 00:40:25 Unfortunately, he can't remember the elaborate series of pass phrases needed to verify his identity. Look, maybe I can give you some information and then you give me some information. All right, we'll just share a little information. My name is Bob Ferguson. I don't know if you've ever heard me, all right. I was part of French 75 for years, years and years, all right? They used to call me Ghetto Pat, Rocket Man, stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:40:50 Only problem is I fried my brain since then, man. I have abused drugs and alcohol for the past 30 years, man. I'm a drug and alcohol lover, and I cannot remember for the life of me or the life of my only child, the answer to your question. Number three is Caught by the Tides, an unclassifiable hybrid of fiction and nonfiction from the Chinese director, Jia Zhang Ke. Drawn from a mix of archival footage and newly shot material, it's a one-of-a-kind portrait of the myriad transformations that China has gone through over the power. two decades. At number four is another structurally bold Chinese title. It's called Resurrection, and it's a bit like an avatar movie for film buffs. Placing us in the head of a shape-shifting protagonist, the director, Began, takes us on a gorgeous, dream-like odyssey
Starting point is 00:41:48 through various cinema genres, from historical spy drama to vampire thriller. My number five movie is the year's best documentary. My undesirable. My undesirable Terrible Friends, Part 1, Last Air in Moscow, from the director Julia Loktev. It's a sprawling yet intimate portrait of several Russian independent journalists in the harrowing months leading up to President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. As a portrait of anti-authoritarian resistance, it pairs nicely with my number six movie, The Secret Agent, an emotionally rich, sneakily funny, and continually surprising drama, from the director Claibor Mendonza Filo.
Starting point is 00:42:33 Set in 1977, it lays bare the personal cost of dissidents during Brazil's military dictatorship. At number seven, is the German drama Sound of Falling. Although not a horror film, exactly, it qualifies as the best and spookiest haunted house movie I've seen this year. Directed by Masha Shilinsky, it teases out the connections among four generations of girls
Starting point is 00:42:59 and young women. who have passed through the same remote farmhouse. At number eight is April, from the director Dea Columbigashvili, a tough, bleak, but utterly hypnotic portrait of a skilled OBGYN, trying to provide health care for women in a conservative East Georgian village. It may be set far from the U.S., but the difficulties these women face would resonate in any setting. My number nine movie is the Zambian film On Becoming a Guinea Fowl, directed by Rungano Njoni. It's a subtly mesmerizing drama about a death that takes place in a middle-class household,
Starting point is 00:43:42 setting off a chain of dark revelations that threatened to tear a family apart. And finally, my number 10 choice won the Palm Door at this year's Cannes Film Festival. It was just an accident. is a shattering moral thriller from the Iranian director Jaffar Panaghi about a group of former political prisoners who are given a rare chance at retribution. In the past, Panahy has been a prisoner in Iran himself, and earlier this month the government sentenced the director in absentia to a year in prison. I hope that Panahy never sees the inside of a jail cell again,
Starting point is 00:44:23 and that his movie is seen as far and why. as possible. Justin Chang is a film critic for the New Yorker. You can find his 10 best list on our website at freshair.npr.org. If you'd like to catch up on interviews you've missed, like our conversation with Ray Seahorn about starring in the new series Pluribus,
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Starting point is 00:45:23 Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shorak, Anne-Marie Boldenado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Chaliner, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez Whistler. Our digital media producer is Molly C.B. Nesper. Our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson. Susan Nacundi directed today's show. With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosley.

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