What the hell did I just watch? Bore fest. Alright, I sat through Saquon, the 101-minute documentary on Prime Video about Saquon Barkley's comeback from a busted knee in 2020 to his Super Bowl win with the Eagles in 2025. Directed by Alexander Pappas with NFL Films, it's built on Barkley's own video diaries-700 hours of him pouring his heart out. Sounds like it should hit hard, right? A raw, real look at a guy clawing back from rock bottom. But, man, this thing left me irritated, like it had all the pieces but fumbled the execution.
The early bits are gut-punching. Barkley's alone, filming himself on his couch, sidelined from the Giants, leg wrecked, just staring at games he can't play in. Those moments, mixed with him talking about being a dad and husband, feel real-like you're in his head, feeling his despair. It's the kind of stuff that makes you root for him. But then the film gets stuck in this endless loop about his 2024 contract drama with the Giants. Phone calls with his agent, Ed Berry, and that awkward chat with Giants owner John Mara? Yeah, it's juicy, but it drags on forever, whining about the franchise tag without digging into the bigger picture. It's like they forgot to give the other side a voice, so it just feels like a long complaint. By the time he's with the Eagles, the whole thing rushes through his monster 2024 season and Super Bowl like an afterthought. No depth, just touchdown clips. Where's the story of how he actually got there?
The look of it bugs me too. Barkley's self-shot videos are cool for authenticity, but half the time they're dark, shaky, and look like my old iPhone footage. The NFL Films stuff is slick, but the editing's all over the place-slow rehab scenes crash into hype montages. And the music? Generic, in-your-face inspirational junk. At 101 minutes, it's too long, wasting time on contract gripes instead of his growth or what running backs deal with in today's NFL.
I wanted to love Saquon. It's got heart, and Barkley's story is legit inspiring. But it's so shallow, it's infuriating-like a hype video that forgot to tell the real story. Eagles fans might eat it up, but I'm just annoyed at what could've been.