BUFFALO, N.Y. -- ESPN premiered "Four Falls of Buffalo," a 30 for 30 documentary film about the Buffalo Bills, Wednesday night at Buffalo's North Park Theatre. The lucky few inside, including some of the Bills' all-time greats, had a chance to relive the glory years of the 90s team and the agony of four consecutive Super Bowl losses.

No amount of hoping will change the outcome of the four Super Bowls, but those involved say the documentary is about a lot more than football.

"It's not just about a football team. It's about our town. It's about our people," said narrator William Fichtner, a Western New York native and longtime Bills fan. "I was blown away. I was really proud, proud to be from Buffalo."

While there were some failures revisited, the premiere was more of a celebration. Bills legends marveled in what has in retrospect become an even more incredible feat.

"I made a career of playing in the National Football League. I was able to take care of the people I loved. I played a game that I loved and I would've played for free," said Jim Kelly. "It just so happens that we came in second place but there were 28 teams back then that wished they were in our positions."

"No one has come close and I don't think anybody will. Obviously, we would've loved to have won four in a row but that didn't happen," said Thurman Thomas.

"It's great because it was a special group of people at a special time in the city. The team that we had really unified the region," said Steve Tasker.

Although the film talks about the numerous egos in that Bills locker room, director Ken Rodgers didn't see that in his interviews.

"Every one of these players wishes that things went differently, not for their own legacy but for the legacy of this town," Rodgers said.

Hall of Fame wide receiver Andre Reed has a different perspective after seeing the fanfare surrounding the film.

"I think we did get it for them. We've got NFL Films and ESPN doing this documentary because they felt we did win it and they felt there was a message to us losing four," said Reed. There's a lot of guys in this league that play 10 years, never get to one and that's the way we think about it."

"Four Falls of Buffalo" premieres nationally Saturday night at 9:30, following the Heisman Trophy presentation, on ESPN.