Genre: Drama
Director: Jaume Collet-Serra
Cast: Kuno Becker, Alessandro Nivola, Anna
Friel, David Beckham
RunTime: 1 hr 55 mins
Released By: BVI
Rating: PG
Opening Day: 28 June 2007 (Exclusive release
in Cathay Cineleisure)
Synopsis:
Real Madrid beckons for the Toon Army's favourite player:
Santiago Munez (Kuno Becker). Whilst his fiancée (Roz
played by Anna Friel) plans their wedding in Newcastle, he
realises every footballer's dream and gets to wear the legendary
white shirt alongside David Beckham, Zinedine Zidane and Raul.
Mirroring the paths of many footballing legends before him,
Santiago, in the second part of the trilogy, basks in the
glory, the acclaim and the money, only for this illusion of
happiness to be shattered and his life destroyed. As the fame
hungry, avaricious and beautiful Jordana seduces
our aspiring Galactico, his past is closing in to catastrophic
results. Set against the backdrop of Real Madrid, Santiago
discovers the ugly face of success and begins to lose his
career, his friends and most importantly Roz.
Movie Review:
It’s
quite apparent that the only goals that “Goal II”
aspires to reach would be to capitalise on the wanton commercialisation
of the sport. In many ways, “Goal II” feels as
inorganic as the Astroturf on Real Madrid’s Santiago
Bernabeu stadium, but it’s entire basis for existing
fits in directly with the current climate of modern football’s
marriage between marketing the lifestyle and promoting the
game.
In
the first film of its trilogy, the late blooming Mexican prodigy
Santiago Munez (Kuno Becker) heads to Newcastle United after
numerous deux ex machinas and quickly becomes the hottest
property in football. In “Goal II”, Santiago moves
to Real Madrid, which the film argues for its own sordid purposes
that it is the best football club in all the land. Despite
overreactions to logistical issues from flippant Geordie girlfriend,
Roz (Anna Friel), he joins up with ex-clubmate, the unhinged
English superstar Gavin Harris (Alessandro Nivola) in a glamourised
Madrid setting.
“Goal
II” glosses, polishes and shines itself into a veritable
product of faux-earnestness, an insincere riches to uber-riches
story of tepid ambitions, frivolous decisions and romanticised
evocations. The world it creates is a cocoon of fortune, swanky
parties, lascivious olive-skinned women, flashy Maseratis,
last minute match-winning goals etc. But the film’s
quick to temper itself with its own version of “problems”
by mirroring real-life WAG (wives and girlfriends) scandals,
poor form on and off the pitch and a hysterical subplot featuring
a long-lost family. While basically existing within itself,
the film gambles on trite sentimentality to form a connection
with its audience despite an ineffectively formulaic and utterly
predictable finale.
It
all just seems dated in its references as footballing distinctions
are by and large cyclical and the landscape of club football
changes quickly. But yet, it’s possibly a harbinger
of things to come when David Beckham is seen as a significant
supporting star by virtue of just being there rather than
a billed bells and whistles cameo. And with the dumbed down
specifics of the game and quaint British colloquialisms for
those with a casual acquaintance with football, the intentions
are clear enough in that the film prioritises US distribution.
Sensationalising
the lifestyle and by that measure, alienating its audience
is not the film’s only hypocrisy. “Goal II”
glorifies the fame and prestige of being a modern footballer
by invoking the media’s fascination with these players
and the reverence they enjoy on the world stage. But at the
same time, it makes sure to show its young, idealistic protagonist
as humble and bashful of his upsurge in publicity. And when
the inevitable happens as a player buys into his own hype,
it shows how the modern footballer’s lifestyle ends
up corrupting Santiago’s bonhomie - the same lifestyle
that the film unrelenting idolises and throws in our faces.
Movie Rating:
(Nothing more than a shill for club football and its
players)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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