It swims and sinks in melodrama.
Green Street Hooligans (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:19
Fresh:9
Rotten:10
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: When it comes to the subculture of soccer thugs, Green Street Hooligans lacks sufficient insight, and instead comes off as a Fight Club knock-off.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for brutal violence, pervasive language and some drug use
Runtime: 1 hr 49 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Sep 9, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $122,300
Synopsis: GREEN STREET HOOLIGANS: In 1988, British director Alan Clarke set a high benchmark for movies about soccer hooliganism with a brutal, unflinching drama called THE FIRM. Few dared follow in Clarke's... GREEN STREET HOOLIGANS: In 1988, British director Alan Clarke set a high benchmark for movies about soccer hooliganism with a brutal, unflinching drama called THE FIRM. Few dared follow in Clarke's estimable footsteps. But filmmaker Lexi Alexander, who joined a gang of soccer thugs during her childhood in Germany, seems well placed to be the director of GREEN STREET HOOLIGANS, which returns to the controversial subject matter some 17 years after Clarke's film. Matt Buckner (Elijah Wood) is a student who travels to London after getting kicked out of Harvard. Ostensibly there to visit his sister, Matt instead forms an unlikely bond with her husband's brother, Pete Dunham (Charlie Hunnam), who takes him to a soccer match to see his team, West Ham. At the game, the inevitable happens, and Matt's initial trepidation at the violence swelling around him soon turns into a pulse-racing, visceral thrill. Suddenly finding a taste for the hooligan life, Matt joins Pete's "firm," the Green Street Elite, leading to further booze-fueled confrontations and providing an opportunity for Matt to keep a journal explaining why he's attracted to such a violent pursuit. Surprisingly, Elijah Wood manages to fit perfectly into a role that seems ill-suited to his elfin, wide-eyed looks. British actor Charlie Hunnam, who starred in the U.K. version of QUEER AS FOLK and TV's UNDECLARED, neatly complements Wood as the Cockney boy who leads him into danger, and together the two actors manage to carve out convincingly violent characters. A loud, energetic soundtrack and roaming, trembling camera work create a disquieting atmosphere in a movie punctuated with scenes of rampant brutality. Sensibly not trying to ape Alan Clarke's approach to the subject matter, Alexander has instead created a very effective work built on her own experience. [More]
Starring: Elijah Wood, Charlie Hunnam, Claire Forlani, Marc Warren
Starring: Elijah Wood, Charlie Hunnam, Claire Forlani, Marc Warren, Henry Goodman
Director: Lexi Alexander
Director: Lexi Alexander
Screenwriter: Lexi Alexander
Producer: Deborah Del Prete, Gigi Pritzker, Donald Zuckerman
Screenwriter: Dougie Brimson, Josh Shelov
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Reviews for Green Street Hooligans
There's a good movie to be made about the violent world of British soccer, or football, as it's called on the other side of the pond. This isn't it.
It's what you thought Fight Club was going to be, before it went in a whole other (and far more interesting) direction.
Pic amply demonstrates that Alexander -- director of Johnny Flynton, 2003 Oscar nominee for dramatic short -- has the chops to bring a fresh take to onscreen rough stuff.
Unfortunately, the beatings are often more interesting than what's caused them.
Terrific because director Lexi Alexander, a German, brings an authentic feel to English hooliganism -- this is a brutal yet tremendously entertaining film -- and treats it very seriously.
This is a brutal, insightful look at a side of sports most Americans don't even know about.
Director and co-writer Lexi Alexander choreographs the fight scenes with thrilling chaos, and the plot unfolds expertly if melodramatically.
Hooligans delivers two main points — that family is where you find it, and that violence can be as intoxicating, to some, as a drug.
Although the central message is questionable and the plot is packed with contrivances, the film makes for an engaging treatise on a subculture.
The steady diet of brutal street fighting makes it all but impossible to connect with this picture, despite whatever visceral appeal it may offer.
A feature-length folly about the terrors and self-affirming joys of football (that is, soccer) hooliganism.
Alexander's techniques occasionally get a bit too fancy, but the movie has a kinetic energy and intelligence that score.
The message is that violence is hard-wired into men, if only the connection is made.
Hooligans loses the plot late though -- in the filmic and Brit-speak sense -- revealing Hollywood, not hooligan, roots.
Viewers hoping to understand the senseless phenomenon of football hooliganism would do better to rent Alan Clarke's nearly 20-year-old The Firm.
Latest News for Green Street Hooligans
August 24, 2009:
Lexi Alexander Gets Lifted ![]()
Lexi Alexander is at work on her next project, "Lifted," about a boy who "is inspired to compete in a teen singing competition" when his father is re-deployed to Afghanistan.... More...
September 17, 2007:
Paddy Considine Is Not Starring in Punisher 2
Paddy Considine is up for the role of the villain in The Punisher: War Zone. Oh, wait -- no, he isn't. More...
July 23, 2007:
New Director and Lead for Punisher 2
You may have heard that "The Punisher 2" will be directed by German filmmaker Lexi Alexander, but now we have word on who'll actually be playing the guy. (And no, it's still not... More...
September 16, 2005:
"Hooligans" Director Quits "Lyrics" for "Labor"
Director Lexi Alexander, whose "Green Street Hooligans" is presently playing in limited release, has decided to bail on the British rap flick "Life 'n... More...
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