Everyone, it seems, has different ideas about what Michael Jackson is actually saying in "Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough." This writer, for one, grew up thinking the lyric was “don’t stop ’till you get it up,” despite the song's title. If you ask Roots drummer (and WIRED cover guy) Questlove, Jackson is singing about forks. David Byrne, on the other hand, points out that the King of Pop is actually talking about the Force.

“It had these bizarre lyrics—well, to me bizarre lyrics—that were quoting Star Wars,” Byrne points out in Spike Lee’s new documentary about the making of MJ's iconic album Off the Wall, referencing the chorus’ “keep on with the force, don’t stop” refrain.

But is that actually the reference Jackson intended? It’s possible. Earlier in Michael Jackson’s Journey from Motown to Off the Wall, which just premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, there’s an interview with a young Michael at Studio 54 where he geeks out about the fact that a few nights prior Darth Vader had graced the dance floor (thereby proving once again that everything was better in the 1970s). And in the song’s spoken-word intro he does say “the force has got a lot of power." And even Lee certainly thinks it’s plausible.

"He was Star Wars and E.T. crazy," the director says when asked about the reference the next morning at his Park City hotel. "He did an album with Quincy Jones’ music based upon [Steven] Spielberg’s E.T."

And that Star Wars tidbit is just the beginning of the great factoids that come out in Lee’s doc, which airs Feb. 5 on Showtime. We won’t spoil them all, but here are a few great tidbits we learned from the movie’s screening at Sundance.

’I Can’t Help It’ Was Originally Written for Songs in the Key of Life

Most people know that Stevie Wonder (along with co-writer Susaye Greene) wrote *Off the Wall’*s mid-tempo “I Can’t Help It.” (If you’ve never heard Wonder sing it, stream it below. Immediately.) But, as Wonder reveals in the documentary, the track was originally written for inclusion on his own masterpiece album Songs in the Key of Life.

Kobe Bryant Incorporated Michael Jackson’s Dance Moves Into His Basketball Style

Many people know that soon-to-retire Laker Kobe Bryant was a longtime friend of Jackson. But as he reveals in the doc, he took some of his style of basketball playing from watching Jackson dance as a kid. “If you’re a great artist, you’ll inspire great artist—they don’t have to be in your field,” Lee says. “Michael Jackson inspired him. I mean, Kobe doesn’t sing!”

The Weeknd Learned His Falsetto From Off the Wall

The Weeknd, aka Abel Tesfaye, has not been quiet about his desire to be this generation’s Michael Jackson. But more than just wanting to be the biggest pop star in the world, Tesfaye also wants to sound like Jackson. “I always use Michael, first and foremost, as a vocal inspiration,” he says in the doc. “And Off the Wall was definitely the one that made me feel like I could sing. I found my falsetto because of Off the Wall.”

Jackson’s Treatment at the Grammys Inspired Thriller

Surprisingly, Off the Wall only won one Grammy, for Best Male R&B Performance for “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough.” It wasn’t even presented during the telecast. It upset Jackson so much that he vowed that his next record would be much bigger. That next record, of course, was Thriller, which won eight Grammys—including Album of the Year. “He was very hurt by the Grammy awards,” Lee says. “He saw it as a big slight and said, ‘That’s the last time that’s going to happen to me. Then he came back with a vengeance.”