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[personal profile] thermalsatsuma
I'm not a football fan by any stretch of the imagination.

I've never supported a team, worn a jersey or even watched a whole 90 minute match all the way through. Every Euro tournament or World Cup season is an excuse to stock up with dvds for the duration. So why did I watch a film about the football manager Brian Clough?

Well, regardless of my protestations there is something about the culture of British football from the late 60s to the mid 70s that is engrained in my psyche. The long hair, the mud, the flamboyance and the threat of violence from both players and crowd all strike a chord. The names from that era all stir memories as well - Bremner, Lorrimer, Revie and of course Brian Clough.

The film compares the time that Clough spent as manager of lowly Derby County in 1967 when, aided by his right hand man Peter Taylor, he took them from the bottom of second division all the way to the top of the first division, to the point when he took over from his arch rival Don Revie as manager of Leeds United. It is a largely fictional account, although Clough's ambition and hubris is a matter of record - he once said that he wouldn't call himself the best manager in Britain but he was in the top one.

The football on the pitch is almost incidental to the clash of personalities in the changing rooms and manager's offices of grimy down at heel clubs. Some of the most gripping moments are told through stark score lines or via the roar of the crowd as heard from a deserted board room. The atmosphere of the 1970s is captured perfectly by the cinematography and use of archive footage.

As for the acting, Michael Sheen puts in a thoroughly convincing performance as Clough and Timothy Spall is similarly good with the more understated role of Peter Taylor. Their relationship over the years is the key to the story and the conclusion is very moving.

The coda to the film notes Brian Clough's triumph in leading yet another struggling club - Notts Forest - to two European championships by the end of the 1970s and calls him "the best manager that England never had". I may not know much about football but, to quote Clough himself - "Do I not like that".

Date: 2009-12-01 06:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] burkesworks.livejournal.com
to quote Clough himself - "Do I not like that"

Shurely that was Graham Taylor - a manager who was never in any danger of being the best in Britain!

Date: 2009-12-01 09:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thermalsatsuma.livejournal.com
You are indeed correct - just goes to show how little I know I about football ... :-)

Date: 2009-12-01 10:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thebustocrookes.livejournal.com
That's the man - Scottish Sports Personality of the Year in 1994...

Graham Taylor would be an equally good subject for a film/ book, but for totally different reasons. He's the well meaning guy, good at a Watford level, promoted well above his natural level, ends up in deeper water, with hillarious consequences...

You've got class issues, you've got men in blazers, you've got Carlton Palmer on the right wing, you've got a well meaning man stumbling into something he can't cope with (shades of John Major etc), it's the classic English farce - Graham Taylor The Movie ;-)

Date: 2009-12-02 10:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] msb66.livejournal.com
A friend gave me the novel. I did enjoy it, although Cloughy is hardly a jolly character. I liked the concept of the book. Have just bought the DVD, but not watched that as yet.

Living in the Midlands as a kid Brian Clough was a big character on local telly - always in the news for one reason or another.

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