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Green Street Hooligans Movie Review
Green Street Hooligans Review

"Green Street Hooligans" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Lexi AlexanderProducer : Deborah Del Prete,Gigi Pritzker,Donald Zuckerman
Screenwiter : Lexi Alexander,Dougie Brimson,Josh Shelov
Starring : Elijah Wood,Charlie Hunnam,Claire Forlani,Marc Warren,Leo Gregory,Henry Goodman,Geoff Bell
Lately, Elijah Wood has been very busy trying to establish himself as an actor
apart from his role as Frodo in the obsessively popular Lord of the Rings
phenomenon. Portraying peculiar supporting characters in Eternal Sunshine of
the Spotless Mind, Sin City, and Spy Kids 3-D, he’s definitely made a valiant
effort. He continues with Green Street Hooligans, this time attempting to play
a tough guy. This is a first for Wood… and, hopefully, a last.
Originally titled just Hooligans, the film begins as a Harvard journalism
student named Matt (Wood) is wrongfully expelled. To escape from his father’s
judgment, he jumps aboard a plane headed to London to visit his sister (Claire
Forlani) and her husband Steve (Marc Warren). Almost immediately — maybe out of
rebellion, maybe out of curiosity — he ditches sis and her hubby to hit the
local pubs and football games (soccer for Americans) with Steve’s irresponsible
brother, Pete (Charlie Hunnam), and his band of hard-edged, hooligan friends.
Normally a quiet and reserved bloke, Matt is shocked to find himself at home in
Pete’s world -- and Pete’s world is a rough place. English gangs — called firms
— encourage their local football teams by throwing obscenely violent brawls
with their rivals. Before he realizes what’s happening, Matt finds himself
smack dab in the middle of Pete’s firm. At first, he’s reluctant to fight, but
once he begins to participate in the fights, Matt discovers that he can throw
quite the punch, and deliver a wicked head butt. Hell, maybe this is what he
needed all those years: The freedom to kick ass!
Reportedly, this kind of underground chaos does circle professional sports in
England. It seems that Hooligans was made to expose to the pubic what’s really
happening in poverty-ridden United Kingdom. It succeeds — I had no idea
disadvantaged British youth were so directionless, vicious, and addicted to
sports. In its unoriginal, self-important way, the movie shows that everybody
needs something to stand up for. But the only thing these characters have to
stand up for is jersey-wearing athletes kicking balls into string nets.
Green Street harbors solid acting, no doubt, from the supporting cast and, most
notably, Charlie Hunnam. He failed to impress with his work in Abandon or
Nicholas Nickleby, but here he delivers a surprising, knockout performance.
Physically, the actor is not a brooding, intimidating figure like his character
on screen. With what he doesn’t possess in physical presence, Hunnam makes up
with threatening, hard-edged attitude. He is — simply put — perfection.
Elijah Wood, however, is unable to do the same. Playing against type can open
new doors in an actor’s career or slam on the breaks, and Wood’s “tough guy”
train just came to a screeching halt. Granted, the point of Green Street is to
show how a measly bookworm makes the transition to streetwise hooligan. But
Wood doesn’t pull it off at all. The quirky, “odd duck” stamina Wood normally
brings to his characters shines through, despite his attempts to hold it back.
Kudos to Wood for challenging himself in the role, but let’s hope doesn’t do it
again.
Even if Elijah Wood’s role were recast, however, Green Street Hooligans still
wouldn’t be interesting or exciting. The characters rush aimlessly from one
street fight to another, without rhyme or reason or intelligence. Yes, the film
is showing what the British underground firm world — or whatever you want to
call it — is really like. But that doesn’t make for an engaging story. The plot
drags and drags, almost entirely absent of tension.
The DVD includes a making-of documentary and a music video.
Aka Hooligans.
Not in the hair!
Reviewer: Blake French
i thought bovver was absolutely brilliant in his portrayel of a football
hooligan,a bit jealous that he thought he had lost his best mate to a yank,but
in the end trying to do the right thing as all of us hooligans do.
if big t reads this drop us an e-mail mate to paulwilliamfoskett@hotmail.com
we must of been in a few scraps together.Green street is the best football
hooligan film so far,i have just played a small part in the rise of a foot
soldier due out later this year and i think it could exceed green street,it
portrays the icf really well
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