Javascript Menu by Deluxe-Menu.com

GIFT CARDS SNEAK PREVIEW CLUB THEATRE RENTALS CONTACT US
GROUP SALES E-NEWSLETTER QUALIFICATION JOBS



Cast : Michael Sheen, Timothy Spall, Colm Meaney, Jim Broadbent

This film is no longer playing at Laemmle Theatres.

Purchase the DVD

Click here to see where it played.
The Damned United
98 Minutes | R  |  Drama, Bio-pic
Color  |  35mm

Watch the Trailer
Visit Official Website
Distributor: Sony Classics

Film Summary
The screenwriter Peter Morgan and the actor Michael Sheen collaborated on The Queen and Frost/Nixon; this time they take on the true story of the controversial football (i.e., soccer) coach Brian Clough (Mr. Sheen), who spent 44 days as the manager of the championship team Leeds United. Directed by Tom Hooper. With Timothy Spall and Jim Broadbent.

“You don't have to be a soccer expert, or even know all that much about the sport, to get sucked into the competing personalities and personal dramas of
The Damned United.” (Christy Lemire, Associated Press)

“We call it soccer, but for the Brits, it's football, and it's damn serious business. From 1968 to 1974, Brian Clough (Michael Sheen), a manager/coach from the tiny town of Derby, and his assistant manager, Peter Taylor (Timothy Spall), turned a third-rate club into division champs. That success wasn't nearly as sweet as getting to take over Leeds United, a top-tier team previously managed by Clough's arch enemy, Don Revie (Colm Meaney). In this terrific film, screenwriter Peter Morgan (The Queen, Frost/Nixon) and television director Tom Hooper (John Adams), making his feature debut, use a series of elegantly staged flashbacks to trace Clough and Taylor's rapid rise to fame, and the hubris that led the former to stumble badly when he got to Leeds, while also wounding his lifelong friendship with Taylor. A movie about soccer that doesn't spend a lot of time on the field, The Damned United, like everything Morgan writes, is an intimate character study, one that is enriched by a stellar ensemble of British pros, including Jim Broadbent as Derby's team owner. These actors are good at what they do—like those soccer players that dodge and weave with effortless grace.” (Chuck Wilson, Village Voice)


Visit IMDB

NaamatSocialAdvertise