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  • Hooligan movies are all the rage

    The Daily Telegraph, UK
    May 7 2004

    Hooligan movies are all the rage
    (Filed: 07/05/2004)


    We're about to witness a rash of films about football violence – and
    one of them stars Elijah Wood. By Matt Munday

    Remember how Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels spawned a rash of
    identikit Brit gangster flicks? And how there are only so many
    wise-cracking spivs, cocked-up capers and Vinnie Jones temper
    tantrums we can endure before the fun wears off? We may be about to
    witness a similar boom-bust cycle. But instead of East End wise guys,
    this time it's football hooligans.


    Firm stance: The Football Factory

    No fewer than four films about the darker side of terrace culture are
    due in the coming year. The one with the highest profile is likely to
    be The Yank, a big-bucks Hollywood movie in which Elijah Wood - Frodo
    in the Lord of the Rings trilogy - plays a Harvard drop-out who moves
    to London and develops a taste for match-day madness. It has just
    finished filming and will be released in January next year.

    Then will come Irvine Welsh's portrait of Cardiff City FC's notorious
    fighting gang, the Soul Crew, which is filming this summer. Then an
    adaptation of reformed hooligan Cass Pennant's autobiography,
    Congratulations, You Have Just Met the ICF (an acronym for West Ham
    United's real-life fighting element, the Inter-City Firm).

    But first out of the traps comes The Football Factory, directed by
    Nick Love, whose 2001 debut, Goodbye Charlie Bright, won acclaim for
    its gritty realism. That's a quality also in evidence in his new
    film, notably during The Football Factory's shocking climax - a mass
    brawl on a patch of south London waste ground between rival gangs
    from Chelsea and Millwall. A bone-crunchingly accurate and
    unflinching depiction of soccer violence, it ends with hapless lead
    character Tommy Johnson (Danny Dyer) being kicked half to death. And
    its authenticity derives in part from the fact that the majority of
    the brawlers are the real thing.

    "Previous films about football violence [the most recent of which was
    1995's risible ID] have never worked because of the lack of attention
    to detail, the implausibility of the characters, and the ridiculous
    way that the actual violence is handled," says Love, in a heavy south
    London accent.

    "And there's nothing worse than watching a film and thinking, 'I
    don't believe this'. So we roped in thugs from most of the big London
    'firms' - though we were terrified of local rivalries spilling over
    into actual fighting. But the astonishing thing was, at the end of a
    take, they all started clapping and bowing to each other."

    The Football Factory depicts four generations of white working-class
    Londoners, all except the oldest - Bill Farrell, a Second World War
    hero - trapped in a culture of brutal violence, moral apathy and
    aspirational fashion (as in real life, the football hooligans are not
    Dr Martens-wearing skinheads, but smartly dressed "casuals" clad in
    upmarket brand names: Burberry, Stone Island and Aquascutum).

    Thus, the bitter fortysomething Billy Bright (Lock, Stock's Frank
    Harper) mercilessly bullies the teenage wannabe Zeberdee (Roland
    Manookian), who then metes out similar abuse to youngsters half his
    age. True, throughout the film, twentysomething Tommy Johnson
    questions whether the casual lifestyle is "worth it", but he fails,
    even after nearly losing his life, to choose another path.

    So is The Football Factory a validation of the thug lifestyle, or is
    it trying to pull off something more complex and challenging? When
    the fight sequences are accompanied by an adrenaline-stoking
    soundtrack from the likes of Primal Scream and The Streets, it is
    easy to see how Love might be accused of the former - especially as
    public apprehension increases in the run-up to Euro 2004.


    'We roped in thugs from most of the big London firms'

    "All films should ask questions," he says, "so I decided during
    editing to sacrifice labouring any point. The criticism has already
    started: people have said that it is hard to empathise with some of
    the characters because of all the swearing and violence - but my
    predicament was that I had to be truthful about them. At the same
    time, I ensured there is less than five minutes of actual violence in
    the whole film - I didn't want to alienate the public."

    "Because football violence is such a hot potato," says Manookian,
    "it's easy to overlook how balanced the film is." His character,
    Zeberdee, racially abuses an Asian family on a bus, to the disgust of
    Bill Farrell. "The older character, Bill, actually fought against
    far-Right extremists in the war, and that point is explicitly made in
    the film," says Manookian, who is of Armenian descent and endured
    racist abuse himself while growing up in Bermondsey. "And I don't
    seriously think that any film has the power to affect English
    hooliganism one way or another: if people are going to cause trouble
    at Euro 2004, they'll do it regardless."

    Neither Love, Manookian nor Harper had to do much research. "I've
    been around people like that all my life," says Harper. "It was just
    part and parcel of where I grew up [near Catford, south London]. I've
    never been involved in football violence - my dad would have disowned
    me. And I'm one of a lucky minority that has found an outlet in the
    arts. But there are generations out there who feel really lost - and
    they are the most un-PC group in the country: white, working-class
    heterosexuals. The people New Labour hate. They feel they've got no
    place in their own country any more. And they are expressing their
    frustration through drinking and violence."

    "This film has nothing to do with race," insists Love. "It's purely
    an indictment of all that New Labour rubbish about England being a
    classless society."

    So far, so grim. But has Love's foray into hooligan culture afforded
    any insight as to how society should tackle it? "It has got to come
    from parenting and schooling," he says, in a trice. "We should be
    looking towards the one-year-olds and the unborns - because their
    paths aren't determined yet - and working out how to make their lives
    better."


    'The Football Factory' is released next Friday
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