THE ARCHIVE
Films
Flick to kick | Flick to kick |
|
West Ham United aren’t particularly happy about Lexi Alexander’s new film about English football hooligans, part of which was shot in and around the Boleyn Ground. They’re not the only ones. Having sat through the entire two hours, I’m not very happy about it either. Also distressed, presumably, will be a trailer full of casting agents, stylists, location managers and accent coaches, who between them have managed to recruit and train a platoon of football faces that veers from the Irish-Cockney-Dick-Van-Dyke turn of Pete, head of the GSE West Ham crew, and star name Elijah Wood’s pale and frankly laughable imitation of a hardened street-fighter. “It just doesn’t make any sense. What are you even doing here?” Wood’s character is asked by his sister Shannon half an hour into the film. Wood has just turned up on her doorstep in South Kensington. Moments earlier he was being expelled from Yale over some vague business to do with his preppy room-mate selling drugs. Shannon, you feel, might have a point. Green Street is a film about English football hooligans made for an American audience. Journalism student Buckner – played, let’s make this completely clear, by whey-faced, pint-sized, deathly earnest, big bwown eyes wike a wickle wabbit Elijah Wood – proceeds to fall in with his brother-in-law Pete and his hoolie mates. Before you know it the previously-weedy Buckner is wading into his first ruck, travelling the length of the country to duff up some Man Utd fans, and eventually rolling around amid much blood on the streets of east London. Most of the English people involved either die or end up in hospital. Buckner, meanwhile, goes back to America, gives his evil preppy room-mate what for, clears his name and gets on with being a world famous journalist. It’s obvious why West Ham aren’t happy about all this. Having allowed their ground and their good name to be attached to the whole thing, the club are now set to become an object of pilgrimage for every clammy-palmed teenage soccer hooligan-fantasist in the US (more of whom later). From a British point of view, it’s much harder to understand why this film was made at all. There is no real point to be made here. People who like to fight occasionally attach themselves to football clubs. This was more of a problem before strict policing and simple economic pressure transformed the atmosphere in and around football grounds. You may as well make a film about drunk people having a roll around in the town centre on a Saturday night. The phrase “glamourising violence” springs to mind, only it’s not very glamorous at all. Some of these mindless thugs really do seem to be mindless, although that might just be the unhelpful script. Worst of all is arch GSE hoodlum Bovver, whose main talent lies in his unwaveringly sneery facial. “We don’t... like... yanks,” he gurgles at Buckner during a tense early scene at a pub urinal. Even further down the scale than Bovver are the Millwall mob, a group of ageing low-brows with sandpaper scowls and zero vocabulary beyond fight-intros and come-and-have-a-go posturing. These aren’t people, they’re Orcs: a necessary stereotype in this kind of good-guys/bad-guys storytelling. From WSC 223 September 2005. What was happening this month On the subject...
Comments (0)
Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.
|
| «Previous | | | Next» |
|---|
Today's most read WSC articles
Kenny Achampong Tricky midfielder who disappeared |
Tom Davies |
WSC 179 Jan 02 |
No love, no joy Tim Lovejoy’s rubbish autobiography |
Taylor Parkes |
WSC 250 Dec 07 |
There or thereabouts Keith Alexander obituary |
Rob Bradley |
WSC 278 Apr 10 |
Age of chance The lack of young English talent |
Gavin Willacy |
WSC 248 Oct 07 |
Bury No money, more worry |
Chris Bainbridge |
WSC 207 May 04 |
|
|
|
|
Oceania's eleven Solomons shock |
Matthew Hall |
WSC 210 Aug 04 |
Burnt at the stakes Betting on the Euros |
David Bendelow |
WSC 210 Aug 04 |
War of words Rupert Lowe's victory over the Times |
Neil Rose |
WSC 228 Feb 06 |
Unreasonable force Heavy policing in Portugal |
Adam Brown |
WSC 123 May 97 |








Subscribe to this comment's feed