For as long as I can remember I
have always loved football, particularly international football. In fact, my
first football memory (at about six years old) is eagerly standing up when the
head teacher asked for anyone who wishes to watch England play Tunisia at the
1998 World Cup to stand up - England won 2-0 with both goals coming at the end
of each half. I love the World Cup, for me it's the best sporting spectacle on
the planet, I love the passion, the excitement, the heartbreak, the emotion,
the intensity, the tension and I love it despite the inevitable English
disappointment. There is one problem, and it's a biggie, which is the World Cup
is organised by FIFA who are the subject of United
Passions.
United Passions follows FIFA from its
creation in 1904 to the awarding of the 2010 World Cup to South Africa, the
first African nation ever to host the World Cup. United Passions follows three FIFA presidents in FIFA's most
important eras, first Jules Rimet (Gerard Depardieu) and the invention of the
first World Cup in 1930, João Havelange (Sam Neill) and the current (yet ex)
President Sepp Blatter (Tim Roth).
United Passions presents FIFA as the moral bastions in promoting
racial and sexual harmony across the world. United
Passions is a film where the executives are presented as heroes for
bringing the beautiful game to the rest of the world. In the real world,
however, FIFA is a vile organisation that forces countries into mountains of
debt by making them build giant cathedrals which will be never used again (a football stadium in Brazil is now a bus depot, you can now literally park the
bus) before pissing off with the money and leaving the host nation to pick up
the pieces.
This propaganda barfest stinks of
moral righteousness so much so that it is offensive that they lecture the British (who
are seen as racist, ignorant, arrogant pantomime villains) on morals when they
claim to be an all inclusive organisation yet vote to host the World Cup in two
countries with very questionable human rights records. In fact by the time the
World Cup stadiums have been built for the 2022 World Cup over 4000 migrant
workers (mainly from Nepal and India) are predicted to have been killed whilst
building the stadiums.
FIFA's inaction to Qatar's despicable
treatment of migrant workers just makes their moral telling off of Britain to
be rather insulting. That said, however, the reign of Englishman Stanley Rous
was a particularly racist one and the film doesn't ignore it entirely (it
doesn't ignore corruption either but it's a blink and you'll miss it type of
discussion) but uses Stanley Rous' villainous depiction to present Blatter as
moral leader in the crusade for good.
Currently FIFA is embroiled in the
biggest scandal it's ever faced as it has now come to light that FIFA is most
corrupt international sport governing body in the world. Allegations of fraud,
embezzlement and corruption led to the arrest of several major figures in FIFA.
Depending on how you look at it the timing of the release of this vanity fest
in the US is either as well timed as a Titus Bramble last minute own goal or as
well timed as a pin point Xavi pass. For sheer comic relief it's probably the latter.
Much of the corruption
allegations centre around the awarding of 2018 and 2022 World Cups. Even when
Qatar was announced as host back in 2010 there were raised eyebrows. Jokes were
made at the expense of a clearly unsuitable host as people predicted the hosts
for the following World Cups - 2026: Afghanistan, 2030: The Arctic, 2034: The
Moon, 2038: 1970s Cambodia. Researching Qatar there can be no reason other than
bribery that the tiny, gulf state was awarded the World Cup. A country where summer
temperatures can exceed 45 degrees centigrade and the national team (and
league) has no pedigree. Qatar was seen has a 'high risk' option because the
country has to literally build entire cities to accommodate the influx of
people who will be arriving from every corner of the globe.
I haven't even got started on the
human rights issues and the homosexual laws in both Qatar and Russia that are
of no concern to FIFA. In fact the heroic, and morally superior, leader
depicted in United Passions said that
gay people should 'refrain from sexual activities' if they wish to attend the
World Cup in Qatar. He also said that to get people interested in women's soccer
the women should wear shorter shorts, and despite the film's claim he is a
champion of women's football he has no idea who Alex Morgan is.
Anyway, in the eyes of the FIFA
ethics committee (yes, really), Qatar and Russia did no wrong. In fact, it was
the English FA who were criticised the most but that's not the end of it.
Michael Garcia, the man who led the investigation into the bidding process of
the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, claimed that the summary of his report was
erroneous and resigned in protest. Qatar did no wrong even though the Qatar Football
Association head paid a FIFA executive a large sum of money during the period the bidding process was in procession, but this was viewed as
not being directly related to the World Cup bid. Yeah, OK. In addition, the
summary noted that Russia provided "only a limited amount of documents
available for review", as the computers lent to the Russian team had been
destroyed, and several email accounts were unable to be accessed. Yeah, OK.
Nothing fishy there.
Enough about the politics of the
film, what about the quality of the
filmmaking? Even if you pushed aside the blatant propaganda United Passions is a bad film. The pace
is inconsistent, the time jumps random and sporadic, the dialogue is expository,
hilariously ironic and cringe worthy (Jules Rimet is a 'visionary' apparently)
and the performances are woeful (Sam Neill's accent in particular is closer to
Irish than Brazilian). Worst of all how can you capture the love of game by following a group
of boring men in suits?
For a non fans of the sport this
film will tell you nothing about FIFA or the history of the game, you'll be
left wondering why so much time was spent on one single football match (1950
World Cup final between Brazil and Uruguay), fans of the sport will understand
the context of this match that is regarded as one of the most shocking in
Brazilian football history. However, to tell the history of an 100 year old
organisation in two hours is a difficult feat and one not achieved here. Want
to watch a film about football? Watch Next
Goal Wins.
0.5/5
I read about this film. It must be that bad. What did FIFA do to get these actors to be in this piece of shit. FIFA pisses me off into what they're doing. Making countries w/ little money to build stadiums they'll use for a few months and then... nothing....
ReplyDeleteIt's disgusting as I feel bad for the countries that could've hosted it and would've been ready in advance. This is awful.
What makes matter worse if that FIFA claim to be a nonprofit organisation yet have have 1 billion dollars in the bank. They could, and should, help with the financial side of things
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