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Green Street Hooligans
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Green Street Hooligans

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A young man moves to London and becomes a soccer hooligan after being wrongfully expelled from Harvard University.
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Media Type: DVD
Artist: HUNNAM/FORLANI/WOOD
Title: GREEN STREET HOOLIGANS
Street Release Date: 08/29/2006
Domestic
Genre: ACTION / ADVENTURE

 
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Product Details
Actors:David Alexander (XVI), Oliver Allison, James Allison, Joel Beckett, Geoff Bell
Director:Lexi Alexander
Format:AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Language:English
Subtitle:English, French, Spanish
Number of Discs:1
Studio:Warner Home Video
Run Time:108 minutes
DVD Release Date:June 13, 2006
Average Customer Rating: based on 82 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Green Street  Jul 25, 2008
This is a great video for Irish Soccer fans. Not only does it show soccer but it shows honor.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

3Great Idea but fell Short  Jun 24, 2008
I thought this was a great idea for a movie. I love English football and am familiar with the hooligan issue which made me excited to see it. There are segments in the film that were just great, but, overall, it was too melodramatic for my tastes. Further, the film was a bit clichéd. Elijah Wood plays the classic fatherless son who seeks guidance and affirmation from a gang (which, of course, is precisely what often occurs). The subplot of the privileged politician's son setting him up was again over familiar as was another substrain wherein his sister's husband got married and--yet again!--managed to morph a bad man straight. That was a dubious proposition indeed. As far as the acting goes I thought Charles Hunnam was sensational, but could not buy Wood as (even) a semi-tough firm member. Frodo came off as weak and fragile here. It's hard to suspend belief that he would be anything but dead in a real fight. I was pleased to see though that Tony Adams was given a cameo role.

8 of 9 found the following review helpful:

4Good Will Hunting in Reverse. (dvd features below)  Jun 13, 2008
In Good Will Hunting (Miramax Collector's Series), Matt Damon's character, Will, goes from a street tough Boston kid working as a custodian at Harvard to realizing his genius. In Green Street Hooligans Elijah Wood's character Matt Buckner goes from promising undergrad at Harvard with two months left to street tough kid in London. I know what your thinking, Elijah Wood, as a tough guy, give me a break, and although he doesn't exactly pull it off greatly it doesn't distract from the movie. Picture the part in Good Will Hunting towards the beginning when Will and his friends get into a brawl in the park and Gerry Rafferty's song Baker Street is playing, Green Street Hooligans is basically that on and off for the whole movie.
Matt takes the fall for something his roommate did, figuring his family being rich and powerful there wouldn't be a point in putting up a fight and gets expelled. He travels to London to visit his sister and her family which he hasn't met yet. Soon Matt gets involved with his sisters husbands brother Pete Dunham played by Charlie Hunnam. Hummam brings a charismatic swagger to his character which makes him a convincing and believable leader in the film. Pete Dunham is a history teacher by profession, but his main priority is leading his soccer firm the GSE (Green Street Elite). Soccer firms are groups of friends kind of like gangs that support their teams, watch their friends backs, drink beer, and build their reputations usually from fighting and humiliating other firms. Think an unconscious version of Fight Club (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) with soccer hoods that have various professional day jobs. The GSE's main rival is Millwall, Matt asks like the Yankees and the Red Sox? Pete replies more like the Israelis and Palestinians. Mainly the movie is trying to say stand your ground but ultimately know when to fight and when to walk away.
The movie is pretty unrealistic in a way which anyone that has been in a few fights can attest to. For example these guys pound on each other and break bottles over each others heads yet all of their bruises are in an attractive kind of way via the cut above the eye with blood just trickling down while you look all intense. Also, they drink tons of brew but are all in shape or have chiseled abs. I imagine the real GSE to have missing teeth, disfigured noses, and beer bellies. Still, Green Street Hooligans is a cool and entertaining movie.

DVD Features:
-The Making of Hooligans
-Terence Jay One Blood Music Video (good song)


0 of 2 found the following review helpful:

5I just love it.  May 09, 2008
I wish I could describe things the way many reviewers do, but in all honesty there is one main connection for my recommending this movie. If you love Boondock Saints, you'll love this movie just as much. You don't need to love soccer, or any of the actors listed - it's just a good flick with believable fight scenes and a great story on trying your feet on new soil.

1 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5Footie Fans Unite  Apr 26, 2008
If you follow football, then this movie is most assuredly the movie for you. Although, the main topic of the movie isn't football, it's the football fans. You know the ones I'm talking about, the crazy fans that get in your face, or most likely get arrested at the matches. This movie shows the side of them that you don't really see. It shows the organization behind the craziness. You've heard of Hooliganism, this movie shows it at it's core. (with substitutions for all around general violence) But you do get somewhat of an insight into the life of a hooligan. This movie has indubitably been bumped up to one of my all time favourites.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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