Few franchises in professional sports shaped their league the way the San Francisco 49ers did. The 49ers of the 1980s and 1990s redefined what championship football looked like—on the field, on the sideline, and in the front office. And they became the standard by which the rest of the NFL would measure itself.
Rise of the 49ers, a new four-part sports docuseries from AMC, revisits that remarkable era with a scope and depth worthy of its subject. Executive produced and narrated by Tom Brady, the series traces the rise and eventual unraveling of a franchise that became the NFL's gold standard for nearly two decades. The series relives the highs and lows of one of the NFL's most influential dynasties—one that changed the league.
I had the opportunity to sit down with the directors of Rise of the 49ers, Ryan Kelly (The Great Brady Heist) and Nick Mascolo (30 for 30: The Tuck Rule), to discuss how the project came together and what stood out most to them. I asked them what they hoped would stay with viewers the longest after watching the series. Kelly said he wanted viewers to remember, "The 49ers were nowhere before they were somewhere. It started with an owner [Eddie DeBartolo, Jr.], then a coach [Bill Walsh], then a quarterback [Joe Montana]."
Kelly mentioned how San Francisco had an owner who changed how NFL owners treated their players. They had a coach who revolutionized offensive football. And they had a quarterback who was just "Joe Cool." And then the 49ers happened to draft a couple of other players who changed the game: Jerry Rice, the greatest to ever play, and Roger Craig, the first player in NFL history to have 1,000 yards rushing and 1,000 yards receiving in one season.
Walsh once said, speaking of the dynasty years, "That was Camelot. That was the greatest experience for everyone involved."
Rather than functioning as a simple highlight reel, Rise of the 49ers places viewers inside the decisions, personalities, and cultural shifts that fueled one of the most influential runs in football history. From the organization's earliest building blocks to the weight of sustaining excellence at the highest level, the series frames the 49ers' story as both triumphant and deeply human. Kelly said he wanted viewers, "To know who these great people were and how they changed the game."
The series makes extensive use of rare and never-before-seen material from NFL Films, including behind-the-scenes footage, team speeches, and archival images tied to Walsh (including the photography of the great Michael Zagaris). That access gives the documentary an intimacy that newer fans can learn from, and that longtime fans will appreciate and remember. Interviews throughout the series feature some of the most iconic figures in franchise history, including Montana, Rice, Ronnie Lott, Steve Young, Randy Cross, and several others.
Brady, a lifelong 49ers fan from San Mateo, California, also appears on camera in each episode, offering perspective on what made those teams so influential and enduring.
The four episodes unfold across two nights on AMC and AMC+, each focusing on a distinct chapter of the franchise's evolution:
Episode 1: "We Built This City" (Sunday, February 1 at 9:00 p.m. ET) examines how a brash young owner and a brilliant coaching outcast began constructing a dynasty in the late 1970s.
Episode 2: "Weird, and Football" (Sunday, February 1 at approximately 10:00 p.m. ET) follows the 49ers' dominance in the 1980s, while acknowledging the challenges and tensions that came with success.
Episode 3: "The Gold Standard" (Monday, February 2 at 9:00 p.m. ET) examines a pivotal period in the late '80s, when internal pressure and uncertainty threatened to fracture the organization. According to Kelly and Mascolo, the story of the 49ers takes a turn in 1987 and 1988. If it doesn't go well, there's no dynasty. But if it does, the 49ers would be considered among the greatest teams ever. As Kelly said, "This was where the rubber meets the road."
Episode 4: "Finesse-Ass 49ers" (Monday, February 2 at approximately 10:00 p.m. ET) centers on a team fighting to preserve its legacy when everything appears to be on the line.
Produced as a collaboration between AMC Studios and Skydance Sports, with NFL Films and Religion of Sports also involved, Kelly and Mascolo direct a masterpiece of sports drama. The creative team brings a balance of journalistic credibility and cinematic storytelling to a subject that demands both. For longtime members of the Faithful, Rise of the 49ers offers a chance to reconnect with an era that shaped the franchise's identity. For newer fans, it provides context for why the 49ers remain one of the NFL's most storied organizations—and why their history still matters today.
Walsh was right. That was Camelot.
Watch the docuseries trailer below: