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The Damned United 

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Review by 
Anthony Morris

In The Damned United, it is 1974 and UK soccer club Leeds found themselves without a manager.

Don Revie (Colm Meany), the man who had steered them to success after success for more than a decade, had been chosen to manage England.

But instead of going with his chosen successor, the board instead picked his biggest rival and the man who had lifted second division team Derby to the top of the rankings, Brian Clough (Michael Sheen).

damned united

It must have seemed like a smart move at the time...

But with a team that hates his guts and without his assistant Peter Taylor (Timothy Spall), Leeds' new manager is adrift. Soon the team are facing down their worst beginning to a season in well over a decade - and for Clough, that spells ruin.

There is a lot of potential here but by mostly just staying on the surface this ends up feeling more like a potted history than anything really biting.

The rivalry between the two managers is handled well, as is the bond between Clough and Taylor, but Clough's collapse as Leed's manager remains something of a mystery: supposedly he wants to do things his way, but his way doesn't seem to exist without Taylor. 

And if he is the power behind the throne, why does this film want us to side with Clough? 

Soccer fans will get more out of this than most, simply because once past the performances this doesn't really delve deep enough to provide much for non-soccer fans to get into. And after all that, the male bonding at the end - their wives having seemingly vanished without trace - feels like a cop-out.

It is a nasty story full of nasty people: a nastier film would have been a much better one.

DVD Special Features

The flick barely registered a blip on the radar at the Australian Box Office - and didn't fare much better in it's native country either - so it's hardly surprising to see that little to no effort has gone into the DVD special features.

But, really, when have they been of any use anyway?

Conclusion: Movie 60% Extras: N/A

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