The French soccer legend turned actor Eric Cantona presents this globe-trotting documentary, a tribute to five fellow footballers who courageously risked their lives and careers by taking high-profile stands against political and social injustice. Co-directed by two award-winning journalists, Football Rebels combines serious subject matter with a sharply edited, fast-paced, glossy visual style. Filmed in multiple languages, it also features commentary from eminent guests including Cantonas film-making comrade, Ken Loach.
Shortly after its gala screening at Sarajevo Film Festival last week, Football Rebels premiered on the highbrow Franco-German TV channel Arte, one of the films financial backers, with simultaneous release on home entertainment formats in France. A similar small-screen future seems likely in other markets too, although the films starry guest list and classy production values may help secure theatrical runs in some football-loving territories.
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But it is not necessary to be a soccer fan to enjoy Football Rebels. Indeed, like this reviewer, you can feel utter indifference towards the worlds favorite sport and still find these stories inspiring and informative. As it happens, there is very little actual football footage in the film, because these are primarily stories of heroic principle and self-sacrifice away from the game.
Four of the films five rebels are interviewed on camera. Didier Drogba of Cote dIvoire, who played peacemaker in his countrys civil war. The Chilean Carlos Caszely, who took a daring public stand against General Pinochets brutal regime. Algerias Rachid Mekhloufi, who defected from France to join a symbolic Algerian propaganda team in protest against French colonial rule. And Bosnias Predrag Pai, who braved bombs and bullets in war-torn Sarajevo to run a football school for children from multi-faith backgrounds.
A fifth subject agreed to appear in Football Rebels, but died in December last year, shortly before his scheduled interview. The flamboyant Brazilian midfielder Scrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira was not just a world-class player but also a qualified doctor, public intellectual, newspaper columnist, aspiring novelist, keen smoker, heavy drinker, national hero and high-profile campaigner for democracy when Brazil was still a military dictatorship. Universally known by his first name only, Scrates deserves a feature-length film of his own.
As well as backing the film through his Canto Bros production company, Cantonas chief on-screen contribution is as gruff anchorman, setting up each chapter with his signature mix of homespun philosophy and vague menace. There is an edge of Napoleonic arrogance in his puffed-up public persona, but always undercut by deadpan self-mockery. Anyone who saw Cantona in Loachs Looking for Eric, or his hilarious media interviews during his tenure at Manchester United, will be familiar with his knowing brand of Gallic pomposity.
With limited time for each profile, this densely packed documentary is sometimes guilty of glibness and sloganeering. There is scant room for ambivalence or complexity in these compressed life stories, which are relentlessly positive and often frustratingly low on context. That said, the film-makers cover a lot of ground, jumping fluidly between different decades, continents and languages. Unlike the game which inspired it, Football Rebels is never boring.
Venue: Sarajevo film festival screening, July 11
Production companies: 13 Productions, Canto Bros, Arte France
Cast: Eric Cantona, Didier Drogba, Carlos Caszely, Rachid Mekhloufi, Predrag Pasic, Ken Loach
Directors: Gilles Rof, Gilles Perez
Writers: Gilles Rof, Gilles Perez
Producers: Cyrille Perez, Gilles Perez
Cinematography: Patrick Feinstein, Gherdoussi Sylvain Luini
Editor: Emmanuel Besnard, Laurence Generet
Sales company: Arte France
Rating TBC, 90 minutes
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