Sunday, 21 February 2016

IMDB Bottom 100: Number 17 - United Passions

Number 17: United Passions (2014)


I have been looking forward to this one.
Ever since I first looked at the list of the films, this was the one that jumped out. As a big football fan, it was inevitable I’d have to watch this film at some point. A film made for $30 million but returned just $607 at the box office. A film that star Tim Roth described as ‘a crap movie I did for the money.’

In part a FIFA biopic, in others a biopic of one Joseph ‘Sepp’ Blatter. At time of writing, Mr Blatter is up to his eyeballs in allegations of corruption, receiving illegal payments and new charges coming seemingly every day. If you’re reading this in the future, he may be sitting in a prison cell right now or he may have got away scot-free (though personally, my money is on the former).

I’ll fill in the early part of the movie but if you want to know, 56:34 is when Blatter comes into it.
It starts in 1904, with the coming together of the heads of various football variations across the world to form a global governing body of football. An invitation to join is given to the English FA but as the inventors of the game, they turn up their noses at the chance to join this little organisation. The English are probably the closest this film has to villains, being portrayed as arrogant, snobbish, racist and sexist. Which to be fair, may well have been true of the gentlemen in question.

The group is formed anyway, taking the name ‘Federation of International Football Associations’ (it is implied the ‘Football Association’ part of the name was a deliberate slight against the English FA). It is actually interesting to see throughout the film how FIFA grew from one small room in Paris to the vast, lavish headquarters it now has in Zurich.


Skip on a few years and we meet now President of FIFA, Jules Rimet played by Gerard Depardieu. This covers the period between 1924-1950. It starts with Rimet’s attempts to launch the first World Cup tournament in Uruguay. They present it as fairly straightforward here but in reality it was fairly shambolic with countries withdrawing (only 13 out of 24 invited took part) and stadiums barely finished on time. Heck that would make for a film of itself.

It’s a success but FIFA is still considered a small time organisation at this point and limps along. Tensions rise throughout the Thirties between Rimet and the Italian and German delegates as real world politics threaten to tear the world apart.

Skip forward to 1942, and they tell what is known in football folklore as the ‘Death Match’. It’s the story of a Ukranian youth side in Kiev who played a team of German soldiers. They were supposed to lose the game but ended up winning the game 5-3 to the delight of the watching crowd. The Ukranian players were believed to have been executed soon after. Much of this is now believed to be myth but what is true is that it showed the power sport can have as an inspiration for an oppressed people. On a lighter note, it was the inspiration for Escape to Victory (though that is actually a more brutal film than many remember. Irish international Kevin O’Callaghan deliberately breaking his own arm anyone?).

Happier times come with the 1950 World Cup in Brazil. This is Rimet’s last World Cup as FIFA president, though he still has time to thank the English for ‘joining our little organisation’. Which is a nice call back to an earlier conversation. Or at least it would be if Rimet had actually been present for that conversation.

And this is where the film should have ended. This should have been the film, the life of Jules Rimet, the visionary who launched a tournament nobody thought would succeed, ending in front of a crowd of over 100,000 people at the Macarena stadium in Brazil with millions more following the game around the globe. It’s a shame about everything that follows, as the first half of this film is actually really good.


There is a bit of filler until we reach the year 1974, when we have our main event. Enter Sepp Blatter (Tim Roth) and the film becomes his vanity piece.

The FIFA president is now Joao Havelange, Blatter’s mentor and a man some believe to have been even more corrupt. He’s played by Sam Neill, who speaks with a Brazilian-Portuguese accent whenever he remembers to.

FIFA is in trouble, they are losing money. Only one man can save them: Super-Sepp! You see, he has an ‘ability for finding money’ (films words). He can ‘create new revenue streams’ (films words).

See how Super-Sepp saves the world of football as he:
  • -          Brings football to Africa and Asia
  • -          Saves FIFA brokering deals with Adidas and Coca-Cola, just by asking for it
  • -          Tackles corruption in FIFA by not actually doing anything

Now to give Blatter his dues, in his time as FIFA Secretary General and later President, football has grown massively in Africa and Asia. Women’s football is the biggest it’s ever been. Whether Blatter can take as much personal credit as he does here though is highly questionable.

FIFA is more profitable now than it’s ever been but again that’s more down to its business practices where the host country of a World Cup pay all the costs but FIFA take all the profits.

And corruption. Blatter talks big about corruption in the film, how the gravy train is over but again, he doesn’t actually do anything about it. Maybe this was the film-makers subtle hint to the audience that Blatter is either a liar or an idiot.

Corruption within FIFA was the world’s biggest open-secret, everyone in football knew about it. Where they went wrong though, was screwing over the USA for the 2018 World Cup. Screwing over little European nations is fine but you don’t fuck with America. God bless you, America!

All that remains to be seen is how much Blatter was personally involved.

The film, first half was good but very poor display in the second half. Substituting Rimet for Blatter was a bad idea. The boy Blatter was brought on to be a hero but at the end of the day, his performance left much to be desired.

I'll leave the last word to Tim Roth:


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