Green Street
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Green Street Hooligans | |
Green Street DVD cover |
|
| Directed by | Lexi Alexander |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Donald Zuckerman Deborah Del Prete |
| Written by | Lexi Alexander Dougie Brimson Josh Shelov |
| Starring | Elijah Wood Charlie Hunnam Claire Forlani |
| Distributed by | Baker Street OddLot Entertainment |
| Release date(s) | September 9, 2005 (UK) |
| Running time | 109 min. |
| Country | UK |
| Language | English |
| Gross revenue | $3,154,346 |
| Followed by | Green Street 2: Stand Your Ground |
Green Street is a 2005 independent drama film about football hooliganism in England. It was directed by Lexi Alexander and stars Elijah Wood and Charlie Hunnam. In the United States and Australia, the film is called Green Street Hooligans, while in the United Kingdom it has the title Green Street after initially being called Hooligans. In other countries, it is called Football Hooligans or just Hooligans. In the film, an American college student (Matt Buckner — played by Elijah Wood) falls in with a violent West Ham football firm (the Green Street Elite) run by his brother-in-law's brother and is morally transformed by their commitment to each other. The story and screenplay were developed by former hooligan turned author Dougie Brimson. Throughout the film, the Green Street Elite fight other firms such as Tottenham Hotspur's Yid Army, Birmingham City's Zulus, Manchester United's Red Army and Millwall's Bushwackers. A sequel called Green Street 2: Stand Your Ground, was released in 2009.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
| The plot summary in this article is too long or detailed compared to the rest of the content. Please edit the article to focus on discussing the work rather than merely reiterating the plot. (March 2009) |
Matt Buckner (Elijah Wood) is thrown out of Harvard while on a journalism course after authorities discover cocaine in his room. The drugs actually belong to his preppy roommate Jeremy Van Holden (Terence Jay) but Buckner is afraid to speak up because the Van Holdens are a powerful family. Jeremy gives him $10,000 for his trouble, and Matt uses the money to travel to Britain with the intention of living with his sister Shannon (Claire Forlani), her husband Steve Dunham (Marc Warren) and their newborn son.
Matt soon meets Steve's brother, Pete (Charlie Hunnam), a thuggish, loud Cockney, seemingly in his early-to-mid 20s. Steve proposes that Pete takes Matt to see West Ham United play at home to Birmingham City. Pete is very reluctant to take a "Yank" to a football match, given the xenophobic nature of Pete's friends and other football fans. But he is eventually persuaded into taking him, particularly because Steve won't give him any money otherwise. Steve in fact gives money to Matt instead of Pete, and tells Matt not to give any to Pete. On the way to the game, Pete tells Matt that there is nothing less he would like to do than take a Yank to the game, so he proposes that Matt give him half the money. Matt refuses, keeping his promise to Steve, resulting in Pete threatening him. Matt scuffles with Pete .
Matt meets Pete's friends in the Abbey. After a few beers, they all walk to Upton Park to see the game. A fight is started with Birmingham's firm, which results in Matt getting jumped by three Birmingham fans, who nearly perform a gruesome torture act upon him (the 'Chelsea Grin') until a small party of the GSE intervene, which progresses to a bigger fight with the rest of Birmingham's firm. Though grossly outnumbered, the small party of the GSE manage to hold their ground against Birmingham until reinforcements of the GSE arrive led by Bovver and chase off the Birmingham firm. Matt does well in his first true fight and is inducted into the GSE.
It is revealed that the GSE's sworn enemy is Millwall's firm, led by Tommy Hatcher. When Bovver begins to get sick of Matt being close with Pete, he starts negotiating with Hatcher. One of the firm sees Matt in The Times' headquarters when his father, who is a renowned journalist, has come to town and is taking Matt to lunch. Bovver learns this and mistakenly presumes that Matt is a journalist himself. Bovver confronts Pete about Matt's journalism. Pete's brother Steve finds out and goes to the Abbey to warn Matt. It is then that Matt finds out that Steve used to be the "The Major," the leader of the GSE.
When Steve was The Major, the last game he went to was West Ham versus Millwall, to which Tommy Hatcher brought along his 12-year-old son, a son who Tommy had raised to be hard. After the game, a fight broke out between the GSE and the Millwall firm. Tommy's son got badly caught up in the fight and was killed. Since then Tommy Hatcher "lost it," blaming the death of his son solely on the GSE, mainly Steve Dunham. After seeing Tommy's son die, Steve quit the GSE.
Bovver eventually arrives, and there is a big argument in the Abbey, which is eventually resolved, but Bovver still doesn't trust Matt. Infuriated, he goes to Millwall's local and asks Tommy Hatcher to come to the Abbey to sort stuff out. At first Hatcher is reluctant, until Bovver tells Hatcher that Steve Dunham is there.The Millwall firm crash the Abbey, with Tommy Hatcher petrol bombing the bar and confronting Steve Dunham. Whilst Steve proclaims he's no longer part of the GSE and says he has a wife and son. Tommy gets even angrier ("I had a son once!") and stabs Steve in the neck with a broken bottle, telling him "If you die tonight, you and me are even."
Whilst the fight is going on in the Abbey, Bovver is knocked out outside. When he comes around, Steve Dunham is being carried out of the Abbey with blood flowing from his neck, which makes Bovver hysterical and deeply regretful. Steve is taken to the hospital by Pete, Matt and Bovver, where Pete blasts Bovver for getting his brother in hospital and saying he despises him. The end fight involves both sides going into a resolution brawl. Bovver shows up and fights for GSE, trying to make up for what he has done. When helping up Pete, who has been badly hurt by Tommy Hatcher, Pete tells him that if he wants to make up for what he has done, he should get Matt's sister and infant nephew, who have turned up unexpectedly, out of there immediately, as one of Hatcher's men is trying to attack them.
Tommy Hatcher goes toward the car that Matt's sister is in to get revenge on Steve Dunham, but Pete distracts him by shouting to him, asking if he wants to "finish him off." After Tommy says he has already finished him off, Pete, still determined to protect his brother's wife and infant child, says that Tommy himself bears the blame for not protecting his son all those years ago ("He was your SON!"). Tommy is driven to insanity by these remarks and he attacks Pete and eventually beats him to death, all the while shouting out the gruesome details of his son's condition after his death. The fight completely halts at this point, and Tommy is eventually pulled off Pete by some of his friends, still screaming. Everyone there stands over Pete's dead body with Bovver sobbing at his side.
Matt then drives with his sister to the airport, where he flies back to America. He confronts Jeremy Van Holden in a restaurant toilet where Jeremy is snorting cocaine. Previously promising to hook him up after Matt took the fall for him, Jeremy agrees again to do so but arrogantly tells Matt to leave. Matt then pulls out a tape recorder and plays back what Jeremy just said, saying that it is his "ticket back to Harvard." Jeremy tries to steal the tape off him, but Matt easily reverses his attack and holds his fist up, as if to punch Jeremy, who is now a quivering wreck. Matt does not punch Jeremy, but instead walks out with a smile as Jeremy collapses to the floor, defeated.
The film ends with Matt walking down an American street outside the restaurant singing West Ham's song, "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles."
[edit] Cultural context
The name of the firm in film, the Green Street Elite, refers to Green Street in the London Borough of Newham, where West Ham's home stadium, Boleyn Ground (more commonly known as Upton Park) is located. West Ham is supported by one of England's notorious hooligan firms: the Inter City Firm (ICF). [1] Although Green Street has received some criticism regarding the exaggerated level of violence shown between the firms in the movie, the cultural validity of the script is rooted in anthropological studies of firm behaviorism. [2] [3]
[edit] Cast
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Elijah Wood | Matt Buckner |
| Charlie Hunnam | Pete Dunham |
| Leo Gregory | Bovver |
| Claire Forlani | Shannon Buckner Dunham |
| Marc Warren | Steve Dunham |
| Ross McCall | Dave |
| Rafe Spall | Swill |
| Kieran Bew | Ike |
| Geoff Bell | Tommy Hatcher |
| James Allison | Benn Dunham |
| Terence Jay | Jeremy Van Holden |
| Scott Christie | Millwall Lad/Ricky |
| Joel Beckett | Terry |
| Tom Vloothuis | Firm Member |
[edit] Awards
LA Femme Film Festival
- Lexi Alexander won Best Feature (2005)
Malibu Film Festival
- Lexi Alexander won Best of the Fest (2005)
- Lexi Alexander won Special Jury Award
[edit] Critical reception
The film received mixed reviews upon release with casting and character accents being amongst the main criticisms. It scored 46% on movie website Rotten Tomatoes[4], and it scored 55% on the website Metacritic.[5] Roger Ebert gave the film a very favourable review.[6]
[edit] Sequel
Green Street 2: Stand Your Ground was released straight-to-DVD in March 2009. The film does not star most of the main cast of the first film, but rather focuses on Ross McCall, who played Dave in the first film. The plot has Dave, who was caught from the fight at the end of the first film, in a prison where he must fight to survive.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Official website (requires Adobe Flash)
- Green Street at the Internet Movie Database
- Soundtrack from IMDB
- Dougie Brimson official website
- Green Street Hooligans 2 (sequel)

