• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

ESPN Films to Premiere New 30 for 30 Series, "Soccer Stories", in April

Status
Not open for further replies.
Press Release

ESPN Films, creators of the critically-acclaimed 30 for 30 film series, will premiere a new series in April surrounding the 2014 FIFA World Cup on ESPN. 30 for 30: Soccer Stories will include a mix of standalone feature-length and 30-minute-long documentary films from an award winning group of filmmakers telling compelling narratives from around the international soccer landscape. In addition, a collection of 10 vignettes about Brazil’s rich culture will be featured throughout ESPN’s FIFA World Cup programming.

“With ESPN being the home of the 2014 FIFA World Cup, we know that sports fans will be looking forward to high quality content focused on what is perhaps the world’s most revered sport,” said Connor Schell, VP of ESPN Films and Original Content. “We feel this is the perfect time to expand upon the success of our 30 for 30 series by focusing this collection on some of the incredible stories of soccer’s legendary past.”

The full list of productions is at the site. Everything looks really good, and here are some selected ones:

Hillsborough, Directed by Daniel Gordon

25 years ago, on April 15, 1989, the worst disaster in British football history occurred in an overcrowded stadium in Sheffield, England, 150 miles north of London. 3,000 fans flocked through the turnstiles to head to the area reserved for standing, despite a capacity of less than half of that. The result was a “human crush” that killed 96 people and injured 766. Initially the police blamed fans for the disaster, but a long investigation revealed that was not the truth. Prior to the disaster at Hillsborough, British football was known for the grime of its stadiums, hooligan fans and inadequate facilities, but great change came after the Hillsborough disaster. What emerged is now known as the most rich and powerful soccer league in the world, the English Premier League.

Garrincha: Crippled Angel, Directed by Marcos Horacio Azevedo

In Brazil, Pelé is “The King.” But his teammate, Mané Garrincha, is also remembered as the one of the best soccer players of all time. In a country where the sport grants its protagonists such royal deference, Garrincha is the jester– an entertainer who amused crowds and turned soccer into an irresistible spectacle, all while helping Brazil capture two World Cups. This, despite his legs being so bent that early in his career doctors deemed him unfit to play professionally. Match after match, he proved them wrong. But his unpredictable moves were of little assistance after his playing career came to an end. Abandoned by the soccer establishment, Garrincha died a victim of alcoholism in 1983. But his fans did not forget him. His body was brought to a cemetery, in the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. Garrincha’s relatives had to borrow a grave, which turned out to be too small for his coffin. Thousands of people flooded the tiny burial ground, much more than the place could accommodate. After 49 years of a brilliant career and tumultuous life, the man who turned soccer into a “Beautiful Game” was memorably laid to rest. His legend lives on.

Barbosa – The Man Who Made All of Brazil Cry, Directed by Loch Phillipps; Executive Producers: Jonathan Hock & Roger Bennett

In 1949, Goalkeeper Moacir Barbosa and his Brazilian national team are on top of the world, having just won the South American championship by a score of 7-0. Barbosa is one of the heroes, widely considered one of the world’s best goalkeepers. But everything changed during the 1950 World Cup, played for the first time in Brazil. Before the final game against neighbor and rival Uruguay, the Brazilian Football Confederation was so confident of victory it had made 22 gold medals with the names of their players imprinted on them. With 11 minutes left, Uruguay shocked the estimated crowd of 200,000 at Marcana and scored the winning goal – a goal that is still considered to be the greatest sporting tragedy to befall Brazil. The blame was mostly pinned on Barbosa for being out of position on his goal line, tantamount to Bill Buckner letting a baseball roll between his legs. The country went into a deep mourning, fans committed suicide, and Barbosa was nationally blacklisted. Barbosa was considered cursed and he never played in another World Cup. He rotted away, practically penniless and alone. On July 13th, the 2014 World Cup Final will again take place at the Maracana, giving the Brazilian team the chance to write a new ending into Brazilian folklore.

Ceasefire Massacre, Directed by Alex Gibney and Trevor Birney

New Jersey, June 18, 1994. Giants Stadium is awash with green as Irish soccer fans arrive to watch Ireland’s opening World Cup match against the mighty Italy. The sense of optimism is infectious. The Celtic Tiger is in its infancy, Bill Clinton’s decision to grant a visa to Irish Republican leader Gerry Adams has propelled the peace process forward and Jack Charlton’s team are walking onto the pitch before 75,000 fervent spectators made up of Irish, Italians and Americans of Irish and Italian decent. Amongst the fans is Irish Prime Minister Albert Reynolds who is sitting with members of an American group who’ve been working behind-the-scenes to end the conflict in Northern Ireland. The electrifying mood is shared by the supporters watching the match in the Heights Bar, a tiny pub in the Northern Irish village of Loughin Island, 24 miles south of Belfast. At the half, the Irish are remarkably ahead 1-0. Shortly after the second half begins, two masked gunmen belonging to a Protestant terror group burst into the Heights Bar. Thirty rounds are fired and six innocent men watching a soccer match were killed. Ceasefire Massacre will reveal how the juxtaposition of the jubilation felt inside Giants Stadium against the horrors of what happened in the Heights Bar, encapsulated the mood of the time. After 25-years of conflict, Ireland and her people longed for peace and prosperity but the brutalities of the violence in the North were never far from the surface. The gunning down of innocent men as they watched a soccer match marked both a low-point and a turning-point in the Northern Ireland conflict; one that would ultimately contribute to the paramilitaries on both sides calling ceasefires just weeks later.
 
Damn @ Barbosa. I've never heard this story. Fans really committed suicide?

As a Bengals fan, it makes me wonder how I've lived till now.
 
They need to just drop the 30 for 30 name. It means 30 films for the last 30 years. Now we're on movie 100 about a story from 1950.
 

AkuMifune

Banned
I'm very much looking forward to these. "The Two Escobars" was my favorite of the original 30 for 30 slate.

I've been watching them through Netflix the past few days. Unguarded was great, You Don't Know Bo is awesome, but yeah I think Two Escobars has been the most fascinating one so far.

Muhammad and Larry was tragic. I couldn't watch most of it.
 

xbhaskarx

Member
This is great but they should have done at least one on the US... some ideas:

- the soccer wars that destroyed the original American soccer leagues in the 30s

- the 1950 World Cup team beating England

- the rise and fall of the NASL (and the NY Cosmos)

- MLS bringing in David Beckham
 
There's a good article on Corinthians and Brazilian soccer in last week's edition of The New Yorker, and the game Barbosa played in gets a mention in the intro. That was the first I'd heard about that loss.
The last time Brazil hosted the World Cup, in 1950, two hundred thousand people—a tenth of the population of Rio de Janeiro—streamed into the newly completed Maracanã Stadium to watch their beloved national team, the Seleção, compete for the title against Uruguay. A monumental concrete bowl, intended to rival the Christ statue atop Corcovado, the Maracanã resembled a spaceship and was meant to embody, as the British journalist Alex Bellos writes in “Futebol: The Brazilian Way of Life,” not only Brazil’s athletic ambition but also “the country’s place in the modern world.” Its capacity was greater by several magnitudes than any other Brazilian stadium. Some ten thousand men had contributed to its construction, practicing goal celebrations while they worked. They’d even, somehow, finished ahead of schedule.

Then Brazil lost, 2–1. Back home, while listening on the radio, three Uruguayans reportedly died of excitement. In the Maracanã, there was stunned, eerie silence, so unfathomable and disconcerting that it left a formative wound in the national psyche. The novelist Nelson Rodrigues identified the moment as the source of his country’s “stray-dog complex”—“the inferiority with which the Brazilian positions himself, voluntarily, in front of the rest of the world.” In spite of the five World Cups that Brazil has won since—more than any other country—the Maracanã humiliation remains the most intellectualized aspect of its sporting legacy, if not of its modern history altogether. “When the players needed the Maracanã most, the Maracanã was silent,” the singer, songwriter, and poet Chico Buarque once declared. “You can’t entrust yourself to a football stadium—that’s the lesson that sunk in after 1950.”





I've been watching them through Netflix the past few days. Unguarded was great, You Don't Know Bo is awesome, but yeah I think Two Escobars has been the most fascinating one so far.
There are so many good ones. I need to work through the rest of them at some point.
 
I've been watching them through Netflix the past few days. Unguarded was great, You Don't Know Bo is awesome, but yeah I think Two Escobars has been the most fascinating one so far.

Muhammad and Larry was tragic. I couldn't watch most of it.

The Todd Marinovich story is a great cautionary tale for anyone who wants to get their kids involved in sports.

The Best that Never Was about Marcus Dupree is also pretty incredible. Dude could've been the greatest RB in history but he let street agents lead him astray. It really gives you a good look at some of the shadiness that has been brewing in college football the last few decades.

And also Pony Excess, a different angle on how outside players affect the student athletes and competitive landscape of college football.
 

elseanio

Member
Hillsborough, Directed by Daniel Gordon

25 years ago, on April 15, 1989, the worst disaster in British football history occurred in an overcrowded stadium in Sheffield, England, 150 miles north of London. 3,000 fans flocked through the turnstiles to head to the area reserved for standing, despite a capacity of less than half of that. The result was a “human crush” that killed 96 people and injured 766. Initially the police blamed fans for the disaster, but a long investigation revealed that was not the truth. Prior to the disaster at Hillsborough, British football was known for the grime of its stadiums, hooligan fans and inadequate facilities, but great change came after the Hillsborough disaster. What emerged is now known as the most rich and powerful soccer league in the world, the English Premier League.

Worth mentioning that the "long" investigation is only really beginning, 24 years after the fact. For those who are interested, or may be after watching the documentary, you can see the most recent report here: http://hillsborough.independent.gov.uk/report/
 

Jamie OD

Member
They need to just drop the 30 for 30 name. It means 30 films for the last 30 years. Now we're on movie 100 about a story from 1950.

They did for a bunch of documentaries that were released after the series was completed and came to the conclusion that the 30 For 30 name was too valuable to get rid of.
 

Verano

Reads Ace as Lace. May God have mercy on their soul
Good material to keep non soccer fans interested in Brazil and the upcoming world cup.
 

ledman

Member
I had the same reaction. It's amazing how everything just completely turned on him after the loss. I'm interested in seeing that one and Hillsborough.

The saddest thing to ever happen to Barbosa was to be barred from entering the Brazilian squad training for the World Cup 1994 by Parreira, the reason was just a superstition, there was no real reason to prevent a former player who was capped so many times like Barbosa.
 

~Devil Trigger~

In favor of setting Muslim women on fire
This is great but they should have done at least one on the US... some ideas:

- the soccer wars that destroyed the original American soccer leagues in the 30s

- the 1950 World Cup team beating England

- the rise and fall of the NASL (and the NY Cosmos)

- MLS bringing in David Beckham

indeed
 

xbhaskarx

Member

I know about Once in a Lifetime, I meant a documentary that focuses on the entire NASL and not just the Cosmos. There were other teams that were interesting for one reason or another (Seattle, Vancouver, Minnesota, Ft Lauderdale, etc.) and other famous players besides Pele, Chinaglia, Beckenbauer, and Carlos Alberto:
Eusebio
Geoff Hurst
Bobby Moore
George Best
Gordon Banks
Gerd Muller
Johann Cryuff
Johan Neeskens
etc.
 

Dazzler

Member
Looking forward to the one about the Ireland vs Italy game and the Northern Ireland pub massacre that took place the same day
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom