View London Review 2005
Goal! review
The Story
Kuno Becker stars as Santiago Muñez, a young Mexican immigrant who lives with
his family in Los Angeles, working two jobs and playing football in the park
whenever he can. However, everything changes when he’s spotted by has-been
talent scout Glen Foy (Stephen Dillane) and offered the chance to try out for
Newcastle United, provided he can get himself to England.
Naturally, Santiago decides to follow his dreams, against the wishes of his
moody father, with whom he has issues. Once in rainy Newcastle,
Santiago is given a month to prove himself worthy of playing alongside the
likes of Alan Shearer and cocky new star Gavin Harris (Alessandro Nivola).
The Bad
The clichés come thick and fast, as Santiago tries to adapt to the
rough-and-tumble of the English game (never having played in rain or mud
before), falls for the team nurse (Anna Friel) and tries to avoid the
debauched lifestyles of his teammates.
Becker’s more of a footballer than an actor and he struggles in some of his
big emotional scenes (“Remember when we played Ful-HAM?”), but he has a
likeable screen presence that carries the film.
The Good
The supporting cast are superb, particularly Marcel Iures (as Newcastle’s
manager), Stephen Dillane and Anna Friel, despite her wobbly Geordie accent.
However, the best performance belongs to Alessandro Nivola, as the egotistical
Harris, who surprises us with an unsuspected depth of loyalty and friendship
and gets all the best lines. There are also plenty of cameos by famous
footballers, some of whom (Beckham, Shearer) even get to speak.
Where Goal! really scores, however, is in the impressive football sequences,
with shots from Premiership games cleverly spliced together with footage of
the actors filmed in close-up. Director Danny Cannon gives these scenes a real
level of authenticity and the matches themselves are adrenaline-fuelled and
exciting, even if we can tell how it’s all going to end.
The Conclusion
In short, the film-makers deserve credit for attempting to bring a serious
football film to the screen and it will be interesting to see where they go
with the next two instalments – will they go for the hat-trick and make the
same clichés work three times in a row? At any rate, Part Two is already being
filmed and sees Santiago at Real Madrid, while the third part is set during
the 2006 World Cup. For now, though, Goal! is an enjoyable drama that should
appeal to football fans and non-football fans alike. Worth seeing.