1 line
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
1 line
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
Not a classic by any means, but at least, in comparison to the first one (Goal!), a more accomplished film.<br /><br />The game scenes were not as contrived as in the first movie, hardly surprising since some of the clips were straight off real matches.<br /><br />Becker did not look out of his depth in the company of the likes of Zidane, Roberto Carlos and David Beckham -- as long as he did not have the ball, that is. In a dressing room scene inside the Bernabeu, for instance, Becker's time on the ball in a jolly juggling scene was thankfully limited to one touch.<br /><br />I guess it's too much to ask for an actor who had real football skills, and I guess that realization kept the cameras more focused on the 'real' football players in game situations. This added more to a sense of realism, as compared to the first movie when Becker was scene doing all sorts of fantastic things -- corny to a trained eye.<br /><br />This movie's real merit comes from the way it handled the human element: Santi's head getting a tad too big from all the media attention and from being in the company of Real Madrid's galacticos; the lover's tiff with Roz, doubtless echoed in many a professional football player's life; and the surprise of finding he has a half-brother living in Spain along with the painful reunion with a long-lost Mother.<br /><br />Dramatic without going overboard, and without losing touch with the primary plot that this is a professional footballer's story. |