Since draft day in 1999, Steve Francis has been persona non grata in Vancouver. After being taken with the second overall pick by the Vancouver Grizzlies that year, Francis swiftly asked his way out of the team, citing multiple factors including distance and opportunity. His electrifying handle and aerodynamics at the point guard position — imagine a proto-Russell Westbrook — were instead to the delight of Houston Rockets fans, who watched Francis blossom into a three-time All-Star. Short-lived as the Grizzlies were in Vancouver, it was one of the more bitterly memorable moments in team history. To be unwanted as a city, at that earlier stage in Canadian basketball, was one of those closely held fears in Vancouver, and it manifested to greater scale just a few years later when the Grizzlies left town for good.

For the first time since he was drafted, Francis is sharing his side of the story in full detail. Vancouver-based filmmaker Kat Jayme, previously known for Grizzlies documentaries such as the Bryant Reeves-centered Finding Big Country, is tackling the team’s history and departure at large in her latest, The Grizzlie Truth. She was hoping for — optimistically — a five or ten-minute interview with Francis. Instead, Francis invited Jayme and her crew back to his hometown in Maryland, and took the opportunity to speak more honestly about his life and the factors leading into his Grizzlies decision. He gets to talk about how he might’ve navigated things differently, and how his perspective of Vancouver has changed in the intervening years. This isn’t so much Francis’ mea culpa, but it is his genuine effort towards reconciliation.

In October, Francis returned to Vancouver — for him, the “belly of the beast” — with Jayme and other former Grizzlies players to attend the premiere of The Grizzlie Truth. The two spoke about Francis’ evolving relationship with Vancouver, the past and future of Vancouver basketball and other takeaways from the documentary, which premieres this week in Toronto.