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Netflix Blood Brothers: Malcolm X & Muhammad Ali

“I want to do in-your-face s**t.” This is the quote that accompanied headlines about Kenya Barris‘s departure from Netflix. In a desire to tell edgier, more diverse stories, the creator of Black-ish and co-creator (with Larry Wilmore) of its spin-off Grown-ish had walked away from a multiyear, multimillion-dollar deal with the streamer to help launch BET Studios. He hasn’t completely severed ties with Netflix, however. In fact, his name, as a producer, is now linked to a new Netflix documentary film.

As its title implies, Blood Brothers: Malcolm X & Muhammad Ali will explore the real-life friendship between the influential civil rights activist, Malcolm X, and the boxing legend, Muhammad Ali, three-time heavyweight champion of the world.

Earlier this week, we brought you the details on a television series that Malcolm X’s daughter, Ilyasah Shabazz, is developing for Sony based on her father’s life. Now, comes the news of this new Netflix documentary, Blood Brothers, produced by Barris. The Wrap reports:

The film is called “Blood Brothers: Malcolm X & Muhammad Ali,” and it’s inspired by a book by Randy Roberts and Johnny Smith. It will incorporate never-before-seen archival footage of the two iconic figures, and it will debut on Netflix on Sept. 9.

Barris also co-wrote Coming 2 America, the most-watched streaming movie since the pandemic began (as of March 2021, at least). Marcus A. Clarke handles the directing duties for Blood Brothers.

Clarke’s credits include directing three episodes of Netflix’s Unsolved Mysteries reboot, including the first (and still best) episode, “Mystery on the Rooftop,” which explored the real-life case of Rey Rivera, a man who seemingly leaped, or was somehow thrown, to his death from the roof of Baltimore’s historic Belvedere Hotel. Theorists have speculated that Rivera was acting out The Game, David Fincher’s 1997 thriller, due to the fact that he mentioned the movie along with similar titles like The Matrix in a cryptic note he left behind.

But that’s neither here nor there. Speaking of hotels in big cities …
Beyond One Night in Miami

Regina King‘s outstanding Amazon Original Movie, One Night in Miami, adapted by Kemp Powers from his stage play of the same name, brought attention earlier this year to the friendship between Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali. The film depicted their relationship at a time when Malcolm (Kingsley Ben-Adir) was preparing to leave the Nation of Islam, while Ali (Eli Goree, his character still going by the name Cassius Clay at this point) was preparing to join it.

As they gathered in a Miami hotel room with legendary soul singer Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr.) and football great Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge), the film explored the tensions between Malcolm and Cooke, the latter of whom had yet to record his stirring anthem, “A Change Is Gonna Come.”

Blood Brothers is going the documentary route, of course, but the recent influx of movies and TV shows centered on Malcolm X almost makes it feel like we’re witnessing the birth of a Malcolm X shared universe in Hollywood. Bring it on, I say. While rewatching Spike Lee’s epic 1992 Malcolm X biopic recently, I was gutted to hear Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come” toward the end. Knowing the background behind that song, some of which was dramatized in One Night in Miami, informed its appearance in Malcolm X with a newfound poignancy. It was always there … I just didn’t appreciate the history behind it.

Blood Brothers promises to inform One Night in Miami the same way: showing the full breadth of their friendship outside that one fictional night in a Miami hotel room. The film hits Netflix on September 9, 2021."

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Very good documentary. Sad how they friendship ended up good to hear that Ali ended up siding with Malcolm when he got older
 
Very good documentary. Sad how they friendship ended up good to hear that Ali ended up siding with Malcolm when he got older

Yea. Doc was solid. Couple small details I didn't know.

I guess captain Sam recently passed away, cuz they interviewed his son and not him.

That old dude from the FOI hat was funny af. He a triple OG.

tbh I only recently found out farrakhan's white man heaven song was kinda what sparked ali's interest in the noi.

I felt sad for Ali's brother tho, can tell he really misses ali.

That old white reporter from back in the day getting old af too.
 
I never thought Elijah Muhammad had any knowledge of Malcolm's murder, the people who plotted that kept it from him.

I agree with the old guy about Malcolm shouldn't have brought up Elijah's kids, that had nothing to do with anything concerning their split.
 
Great documentary... but I couldnt help but feel sad about how all of this shit played out.

Kinda irritated me about the older FOI brotha saying "Well who cares about his(Elijah Muhhamads) personal life.. he lifted you(Malcolm) up out of nothing!"

I aint like that at all
 
I never thought Elijah Muhammad had any knowledge of Malcolm's murder, the people who plotted that kept it from him.

I agree with the old guy about Malcolm shouldn't have brought up Elijah's kids, that had nothing to do with anything concerning their split.

You think a move on Malcolm would of been done without knowledge from Elijah? Not possible.
 
You think a move on Malcolm would of been done without knowledge from Elijah? Not possible.

tbh I hate debating this cuz this is soooo old and no one will ever truly know.

But the noi was so openly talking negative about malcolm, that they had to have known it would eventually lead to his death.

Plus members of the noi admitted they tried to bomb his car.

Now did Elijah give the direct order. I highly doubt it.

But ppl gotta understand. The noi is and was a legit cult. Ppl literally thought Elijah was a direct messenger from God. So why wouldnt they kill on his behalf
 
tbh I hate debating this cuz this is soooo old and no one will ever truly know.

But the noi was so openly talking negative about malcolm, that they had to have known it would eventually lead to his death.

Plus members of the noi admitted they tried to bomb his car.

Now did Elijah give the direct order. I highly doubt it.

But ppl gotta understand. The noi is and was a legit cult. Ppl literally thought Elijah was a direct messenger from God. So why wouldnt they kill on his behalf

The NOI covered up and was directly involved in alot of foul shit that many of its followers and even outside supporters like to try and pretend never happened
 
Great documentary... but I couldnt help but feel sad about how all of this shit played out.

Kinda irritated me about the older FOI brotha saying "Well who cares about his(Elijah Muhhamads) personal life.. he lifted you(Malcolm) up out of nothing!"

I aint like that at all
His name is Melchesidechk.

Just watch the first 2 minutes


He wasn't so much saying "who cares". His point was, Malcolm should have had more care in how he received and reacted to that type of information considering Elijah's role in his life.

If you heard some fucked up shit about a family member, would you handle it in the family or would you run to social media to tell the world? Then how would you feel if you DID run to social media, only to find out that the person who fed you the info was finessing you to look crazy? That's what Wallace did to Malcolm.
 
tbh I hate debating this cuz this is soooo old and no one will ever truly know.

But the noi was so openly talking negative about malcolm, that they had to have known it would eventually lead to his death.

Plus members of the noi admitted they tried to bomb his car.

Now did Elijah give the direct order. I highly doubt it.

But ppl gotta understand. The noi is and was a legit cult. Ppl literally thought Elijah was a direct messenger from God. So why wouldnt they kill on his behalf
You're talking in hindsight, knowing history.

At that time, no one knew about COINTELPRO and J. Edgar Hoover. There were sellouts since slavery but the idea that the government was coordinating infiltration inside of Black organizations was not a widely known concept, not even within the Nation.
 
Ali's brother and the other dude were quick to shit on Malcolm for disclosing that information about Elijah Muhammad.
 
The ending was so sad. That's life sometimes, we don't get to right our wrongs sometimes and make up with the people we've wronged.
 
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