Prime Video: The heartfelt and emotional-driven 'Power of the Dream' is the shocking true WNBA story
It’s hard to believe how much has happened since the pandemic hit in 2020 and especially how much progress has been made since the Black Lives Matter movement - but how about flashing back to the WNBA and the controversy surrounding one of its owners? It’s all in Prime Video’s upcoming Power of the Dream documentary.
It’s hard to believe how much has happened since the pandemic hit in 2020 and especially how much progress has been made since the Black Lives Matter movement - but how about flashing back to the WNBA and the controversy surrounding one of its owners? It’s all in Prime Video’s upcoming Power of the Dream documentary.
It’s eye-opening and still pretty shocking to see how this trailer digs deep into all the drama and revolution which went down during the 2020 season. Tap in.
Today, Prime Video debuted the official trailer and key art for Power of the Dream. The feature-length documentary will launch June 18 exclusively on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide. Power of the Dream is thelatest addition to the Prime membership, with Prime members enjoying savings, convenience, and entertainment, all in a single membership.
Power of the Dream is a new documentary film about the empowering and unlikely true story of how a group of professional women's basketball players took on a WNBA team owner and rallied behind now-Senator Raphael Warnock, forever changing the landscape of their sport and the course of U.S. politics.
Presented by Prime Video Sports, Power of the Dream is from Industrial Media, Trilogy Films, Joy Mill Entertainment, and TOGETHXR. Thedocumentary is produced by Dawn Porter, Sue Bird, Nneka Ogwumike, and Tracee Ellis Ross. The executive producers are Eli Holzman, Aaron Saidman, Jessica Robertson, Brett Bouttier, and Reni Calister. Porter is also set to direct.
Key athletes offering first-hand accounts in the documentary include 4-time WNBA Champion Sue Bird, retired WNBA-star Angel McCoughtry, Layshia Clarendon of the Los Angeles Sparks, Elizabeth Williams of the Chicago Sky, and Nneka Ogwumike of the Seattle Storm, as well as media personalities Jemele Hill and Holly Rowe.