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How Football Practice Goes Wrong in ‘HIM’ | Anatomy of a Scene

  • How Football Practice Goes Wrong in ‘HIM’ | Anatomy of a Scene

Pro football is celebrated as America's favorite pastime, but it also has a very dark side.

In Jordan Peele’s new football-horror flick, HIM, there’s a “recovery room” in Marlon Wayans’ character Isaiah’s training compound that has a symbol on the door: The Philosopher’s Stone. In ancient alchemy, the mythical substance was believed to grant immortality to those who consumed it. But in HIM, the symbol hints at something darker—a torturous deal with the devil that Isaiah made to become a superstar quarterback. 

In real life, top athletes often undergo grueling training processes that can feel like near torture. HIM takes those sinister undertones and runs with them, showing just how intense—or creepy—elite training can be when in the hands of a capable storyteller like Director Justin Tipping. 

Tipping co-wrote the screenplay with Skip Bronkie and Zach Akers, and Peele (Get Out) praised the team for doing “something special.” He said in a statement, “They have taken what I did not realize was creepy about sports and revealed it one notch at a time.”

From hyperbaric chambers to prolonged ice baths, the training and post-practice sequences provide some of the most surreal, hallucinatory, and shocking moments in the film.

Marlon Wayans is Isaiah (back, pointing) and Tyriq Withers is Cam (foreground) in HIM, directed by Justin TippingPhoto: Parrish Lewis/Universal Pictures
The real-world training methods explored in HIM

During a particularly brutal and memorable scene, a Jugs machine turned into the stuff of nightmares. 

The common training device is a pitching machine designed to rapidly launch footballs. Used by NFL and college players to perfect spirals, passes, and kickoffs, the machine delivered one of the goriest scenes in the film. Every time Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers) didn’t throw fast enough, or a teammate messed up a drill, a football whipped into the face of a rookie player until he was bloody, swollen, and slumped on the ground, half dead. 

The film also pulled out tension from smaller moments, such as long soaks in an ice bath. Cold plunging has become a near ritual for athletes, who use icy dips to reduce inflammation and soothe muscles after intense workouts. HIM pushes the line, however, showing Cameron completely submerged for several beats too long, a risky practice designed to make viewers squirm. 

Tipping gives every last ailment a stylized edge, even when portraying the common concussion. When players knock skulls in HIM, the image on screen flashes and fractures, and we “see” the player’s brain rattle around his head, thanks to thermal footage enhanced with VFX.

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