THE BECKER BUGLE

Sep 23, 2005 at 00:03 o\clock

united stars meet their goals!

Newcastle United players celebrated their 0-3 win at Blackburn by attending the glitzy Toon premiere of new movie Goal!.

Newcastle manager, Graeme Souness, was joined last night by the likes of Kieron Dyer, Shay Given and Lee Clark to watch the film, which has St James' Park as its backdrop.

Onlookers had waited patiently outside Newcastle's The Gate complex to watch stars of sport and screen walk the red carpet for the premiere at the Odeon.

Geordie writer Ian La Frenais, with his sidekick Dick Clement, were given one of the warmest receptions as the crowds enthusiastically cheered all who arrived.

The pair, famed for penning the likes of The Likely Lads and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, wrote the screenplay for Goal!, which tells the story of a gifted South American footballer realising his dream and being signed for Newcastle United.

"It is something of a dream come true for us," said La Frenais, a long-time member of the Toon Army.

"We met Freddy Shepherd at last year's Sunday for Sammy concert and he told us they were going to be making a film at St James'.

"We thought that sounded a great idea. And then we found ourselves being asked to write the screenplay.

"A real labour of love. I hope we have done both the area and St James' justice."

Goal! star, Kuno Becker, who takes the lead role of Santiago Munez, was relishing being back on Tyneside.

"There's a great atmosphere to the place," he said as he walked the red carpet. "And with the win at Blackburn, it makes it all the better. I think it was a good omen."

Later, at the after-premiere party in Shearers Bar, he admitted he would have liked to have spent more time in the Toon. "I only arrived today and I'm away again tomorrow as it is all go," he said.

"So I haven't had much of a chance to see the city this time around.

"But I will always have fond memories of Newcastle."

Souness couldn't hide his glee at his team's win, and said the premiere was the icing on the cake.

He took his seat alongside his players, to applause from the guests in Cinema 1, where the film was warmly received.

A smiling audience left the Odeon two hours later, heading for Shearers Bar, where the stars and footballers partied until the early hours, sipping champagne, necking bears and tucking into finger food.

Goal! opens in cinemas on September 30 and has been sold to nearly 100 countries worldwide.

Sep 23, 2005 at 00:01 o\clock

NEW MOVIE TACKLES RACISM IN SPORT

Racism in sport will be tackled at the charity premiere in Glasgow of a football movie supported by Celtic and Rangers.

Goal! is released across the UK on September 30. However, a special public screening will be held in the city on Monday.

Organised by Kick It Out, the performance will be attended by the film's stars Kuno Becker and Glasgow actor Gary Lewis, best known for his role as the dad in Billy Elliot.

Former Rangers' player Mark Hateley, who now has an ambassador's role with the Ibrox club, will also be at the premiere.

The event is seen by the Old Firm clubs as a chance to raise the profile of their battle against all kinds of prejudice.

Hateley said: "Rangers are delighted to be associated with Goal! and I am sure the film will succeed in raising awareness of the issue of racism in sport.

"Goal! sounds like a great story that will capture the imagination of fans everywhere."

A Celtic spokesman said: "We're right behind the film and the Kick It Out campaign to tackle racism in football and society in general."

In the British-directed film, Santiago Munez (Becker), a young Mexican illegal immigrant in the US, makes the unlikely leap from a downtrodden area of Los Angeles to signing for Newcastle United.

Real life football stars David Beckham, Alan Shearer, and Zinedine Zidane make guest appearances in the movie.

Sep 22, 2005 at 23:59 o\clock

star of football trilogy in town

The star of a £100m trilogy of films charting the rise to stardom of a young footballer was in Liverpool last night for the charity premiere of the first in the series.

Goal! stars Kuno Becker, from Mexico City, and was financed by the Liverpool-born, Los Angeles-based movie mogul Mike Jefferies.

A galaxy of footballing stars make cameo appearances in the film, including Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard. Footage from real matches - such as last season's clash between Liverpool and Newcastle United at St James's Park - is intercut with recreated scenes.

Mr Becker, 27, said last night: "Although we shot some of the film at Newcastle, it would have been great to have been in Liverpool because they've got great players and it's one of the best teams in the world. This is my first time here and I think it's a beautiful city."

Mr Becker said he went for the part of young footballer Santiago Munez because he wanted to stretch his abilities as an actor.

"I had to do three or four months' training," he said. "I respect footballers so much more now because of the rigorous training they have to do."

Sep 22, 2005 at 23:56 o\clock

stars to visit N-E for film premiere

An array of screen and sporting stars including David Beckham will attend the premiere of football film Goal! in the North-East.

Organisers are confident that the Real Madrid and England star, who puts in a cameo appearance in the film, will be among the celebrity guests at the event in mid-September.

Beckham is known to have a great affection for Tyneside where the movie is set as he always receives a warm welcome from football fans.

The Goal! premiere promises to be the most glamorous celebrity night Tyneside has seen when it is shown at the Sage Music centre on the River Tyne.

The full cast will attend, including leading man Kuno Becker, Sean Pertwee, Kieran O'Brien and Alessandro Nivola.

Newcastle United are expected to be out in force too, led by Alan Shearer and Kieron Dyer, who also have roles in the story.

Goal! is the first in a trilogy following the fortunes of young Latino footballer Santiago Munez, who comes to England from Los Angeles to join Newcastle United.

Sep 22, 2005 at 23:53 o\clock

geordie premiere for footie film

Stars of sport and screen walked the red carpet for the Newcastle premiere of a football film.

Goal! features cameo appearances by Newcastle's Alan Shearer, Man U's Wayne Rooney and Real Madrid's David Beckham.

The Danny Cannon directed film - part of a £100m trilogy - tells the story of a young Mexican illegal immigrant who signs for Newcastle United.

It was largely shot on Tyneside and the premiere took place at Newcastle's Odeon at the Gate on Sunday evening.

The film had its London premiere at the Odeon in Leicester Square on Thursday, where stars including Newcastle's Michael Owen and actor Alessandro Nivola were given the red carpet treatment.

Those confirmed to attend Sunday's screening included stars Kuno Becker and Alessandro Nivola.

The producers are hoping Goal! will do for football what Rocky did for boxing.

Producer Mike Jefferies said: "We've seen a myriad of tremendously successful films that use sport as a backdrop - films about baseball, basketball, golf, you name it.

"It just seemed incredible to me that the world's biggest sport and, in fact, the biggest form of content on television today, has never been the subject of a decent movie.

"Newcastle appealed to us for many different reasons. They've got very passionate, devoted fans. It's like a religion."

The film, which also stars Sean Pertwee, goes on general release at the end of September.

Sep 22, 2005 at 23:28 o\clock

GOAL-DEN BOY OF MOVIES

Chief Feature Writer Paddy Shennan Talks to the Liverpool FC Fanatic - and Would-Be Reds' Investor - Mike Jefferies About His New Football Film

He wanted to invest pounds 100m in his beloved Liverpool Football Club But he says he wasn't able to. He wanted to shoot the first part of his film trilogy Goal! at his beloved Anfield.

But he says he wasn't able to. And yet Liverpool-born, Los Angeles based, movie mogul Mike Jefferies still has plenty of cause to be cheerful - not least because the Reds are the current European Champions and, in nine days time, his home city will stage a special charity premiere of his new film.

You could, then, say it's been a bittersweet time for the chairman of Milkshake Films and co-producer of the $35m movie Goal!

So before the cheers, let's rewind a little and consider the tears - by asking why his L4 Group's proposed pounds 100m cash injection never made it into LFC's bank account and why the first film in the Goal! series was filmed at St James' Park, home of Newcastle United.

"The situation is that Liverpool FC chairman David Moores wants to continue - and that's his prerogative," says Mike, 41, who was born in Broadgreen hospital and spent the first five years of his life in Woolton, before his family moved to South Africa - though it later settled in Hertfordshire when he was 12.

He describes the European Champions League final in Istanbul as being "one of the best nights of my life" but adds: "It's a bit depressing to see the lack of capital available in the transfer market and clubs like Newcastle United outbidding us for players who we should be buying."

Which brings us onto why filming was carried out at St James' Park"I went to see Liverpool chief executive Rick Parry about filming at Anfield but unfortunately it never happened - I never heard from him again."

Rick Parry, however, stresses: "We were interested. There was not a lack of co-operation from us. But the filmmakers got sponsorship from Adidas - not Reebok. And Adidas sponsor Newcastle, while Reebok sponsor Liverpool."

Now the cheers . .

. The first film in the Goal! trilogy, which Mike co-produced with Matt Barrelle and was directed by Danny Cannon (from Luton, but supports Arsenal), will be arriving in our cinemas at the end of the month.

Written by veteran TV and film duo Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais, of Likely Lads, Porridge, Auf Wiedersehen Pet, The Commitments and Never Say Never Again fame, it charts the rise and rise of young footballer Santiago Munez (Kuno Becker).

Munez is a Mexican illegal immigrant living in Los Angeles, but he dreams of becoming a professional footballer - and his dreams come true when he signs for Newcastle (well, you've got to start somewhere The second film, which is currently being shot in Spain, will see the star line up for Real Madrid and in the third he will star for Argentina(his mother's birthplace) in the 2006 World Cup.

The cast also includes Sean Pertwee, Kieran O'Brien and Stephen Dillane, while some of the most famous footballers in the world, including England captain David Beckham, Newcastle's former England captain Alan Shearer, French World Cup-winning captain Zinedine Zidane and Spanish captain Raul all make appearances.

But Mike insists: "I always say 'No, it isn't a football film'. It's about a young man's odyssey, with football the landscape against which his journey unfolds."

Hmmm, nice. Poetry in motion. But there is, obviously, a lot of football in the film, and Mike says: "We just thought that it was pretty amazing that the game had not been celebrated on the silver screen in a way in which other, less popular, sports have.

"Boxing has had Rocky, American football had Any Given Sunday and horse-racing Seabiscuit. I think it's because directors have been compromised by a lack of money."

But what about Fever Pitch, Escape To Victory and When Saturday Comes? Actually, I take your point . .

. One of the biggest problems about football-related films is the football. Or the lack of it, as the actors sometimes seem to struggle to master.

They filmed a mix of real and stunted action, while Becker and co- star Ales-sandro Nivola married fact and fiction - by hiding behind the advertisement hoardings at St James' Park and then jumping over them to join Newcastle players in their goal celebrations.

"Some of the people in the crowd were definitely scratching their heads!" recalls Mike Of the film's main man, the coproducer says: "Kuno Becker is going to be a very big star and, thanks to people like Graeme Souness and Dean Saunders at Newcastle, he's now a much better footballer than he was."

And the real footballers involved in the film? "They were fantastic," says Mike. "David Beckham, for example, is very charismatic and he seemed to take to the acting experience like a duck to water."

As for whether the film will be a critical and box office success - well, the Milkshake man and Liverpool fan would be over the moon, Brian: "We are all excited. It's been a big team effort and I know we can all look at ourselves in the mirror and feel pretty proud."

Thanks to Fifa's endorsement of the film, the makers have enjoyed excellent access: the second film will feature Champions League footage and the third will include scenes shot during next year's World Cup.

In return for the access, Milkshake Films could promise Fifa exposure, not least in the emerging football markets of Asia and North America.

A good result all round, then.

Goal! is released on September 30

Sep 12, 2005 at 08:55 o\clock

goal: on the ball

Football is the sport that unites all Europeans. It seems nearly every major city – from Madrid to Milan and Lisbon to Amsterdam – has at least one club side competing in the Champions League on a regular basis. The World Cup, starting in Germany next June, will grip Europe for an entire month. There’s simply no escaping football– not even in the cinema, says Jason Solomons.

Traditionally a haven of escapism, our movie screens will be bursting with football-related films in the coming year. Some of this has to do with the buzz and commercial openings provided by the World Cup; some of it is because Hollywood and American audiences are finally waking up to “soccer".

By far the biggest undertaking is a trilogy called, rather simply, Goal! This is a three-part fairytale about a Latino boy called Santiago Munez from the Los Angeles ghetto. He’s discovered by an international scout and snapped up by a big club from the north of England (Newcastle, it turns out). In the second film, he’s transferred to glamorous Real Madrid and plays around Europe in the Champions League. In the final film, he leads his country out at the World Cup finals. A likely story? Even in a film it might be far-fetched but football, as they say, is a funny old game and these things do happen.

The biggest stars in Goal! are footballers not actors – David Beckham, Zinedine Zidane, Raul, Roberto Carlos and Alan Shearer. These established stars of the world game all agreed to cameo appearances, which should ensure the millions of fans they already have will turn out to see the films. But, in a case of life imitating art, the film should make a global star of Mexican actor Kuno Becker, the young man picked to play Santiago.

Goal! producer Mike Jeffries says: “We could have cast a well-known star but we thought that audiences should warm to this character over the three films. Kuno is perfect. By the end of the final film, we will be dealing with a huge star, I’m sure of it, so it’s not too risky a strategy. Like Santiago, the character he plays, Kuno will start out as a fish out of water and gradually grow into his role as a star player.

Jeffries, once a Liverpudlian bartender but now a millionaire businessman in Los Angeles, still follows his beloved game from the exile of Santa Monica. “The chance to get involved in a film that takes me so close to football pitches around the world is a dream come true for me. That’s what the trilogy is about – dreams and how they can come true. That goes for fans, players and coaches.”

The first film features a cast including actors Stephen Dillane, Sean Pertwee and Anna Friel. It also stars Alessandro Nivola, a young American actor who will feature in all three films and plays, as he calls it, the “Han Solo of international football”. Nivola comes from a Sardinian family and is that rare thing, a Hollywood actor who has been playing football since childhood. He’s rather good too, and can often be spotted playing on London’s five-a-side courts under the Westway flyover with his friends. Nivola, 33, is married to beautiful English actress Emily Mortimer and the pair are bringing up their two-year-old son Sam between west London and west Hollywood.

Movie screens will be bursting with football-related films this year as Hollywood wakes up to “soccer”

“My character Gavin Harris is glamorous, overpaid, cheeky, decadent – a real playboy,” he says, adding that he in no way modelled the part on David Beckham. “Becks has an incredibly glamorous lifestyle but he’s actually much more humble than Gavin. He does himself down in interviews whereas Gavin is full of himself, confident of his charm and charisma. He’s more like the former Arsenal striker Ian Wright who has become a TV star now. I remember him being an insufferable egomaniac yet totally likeable at the same time. A sort of loveable rogue.”

In fact, Nivola’s character is there to illustrate the flashy side of the game, the bling bling. “My character gets insulted all the time,” he says. “It’s a sort of running joke. There’s one scene where I wake up in a tower block having just slept with twin sisters. Late for training, I run down the corridor, putting my clothes on, and a local woman recognises me and spits at me. Then another shouts: ‘You’re shit’, then I get to my car, the wheels have been stolen and a bunch of kids laugh at me and then I get in a cab and the driver looks in his mirror at me and says there’s no way I’m worth 10 million quid...”

With new computerised technology and the passion of its producers for the game and not just the money, Goal! may be the end of bad football movies. Traditionally, the genre is laughable, with such classics as Escape to Victory, the all-star romp in which a group of Allied prisoners of war take on the Germans during the Second World War. Led by an overweight Michael Caine, the Allied line-up features Pele, Ossie Ardiles and Bobby Moore, as well as several players from the successful but distinctly unglamorous Ipswich side of the early 1980s, such as John Wark and Russell Osman. Immortally, Sylvester Stallone was the goal keeper.

Technology has changed things dramatically. Nivola says: “You used to have to stage the moves and they never looked real because actors are generally not great players and also audiences really know their football – they can spot fakery a mile off. But now it’s amazing. We shot scenes during real games (such as Newcastle v Chelsea in the FA Cup), got permission to mingle on the pitch at the final whistle, and the next day, we’d go back to the stadium and re-stage the action frame by frame, putting actors in the exact spots where the players were just 24 hours before – they digitise the ball in later.”

Producer Jeffries adds that the films are being made with the complete cooperation of FIFA and UEFA, the game’s governing bodies. When Liverpool won the European Cup in Istanbul in May, Jeffries was there, courtesy of a personal invite from UEFA. The production already has permission to film at this season’s Champions League matches and has become the first film crew to be allowed to film at the World Cup finals in Germany next summer.

“We already know we will be filming on the pitch at the final itself,” says Jeffries. “FIFA president Sepp Blatter has personally become involved in the production because he believes the three films will show all the sides of the game but also concentrate on the essential heroism of succeeding in sport. It’s this sort of authenticity that’s always been lacking.

We’ll have real crowds, real players and real action.”

Sep 12, 2005 at 08:39 o\clock

Footy movie is reel deal

A host of stars will descend on Tyneside for the sporting fixture of the year. the premiere of football flick Goal!

And insiders say Michael Owen's move to Newcastle United will give a boost to the movie and the Premiership club.

Sport stars will rub shoulders with Goal! lead man Kuno Becker and a dazzling array of North celebrities at the premiere, which takes place at the Odeon at The Gate on September 18.

They'll then party away the night at a red-carpet event at Shearer's Bar, the swish new drinking venue just yards away from the film's setting at St James's Park.

Goal! is the first in a trilogy following the fortunes of young latino footballer Santiago Munez, played by Becker, who comes to England from Los Angeles to join the Magpies.

Later movies will show him moving on to Spain's Real Madrid and taking part in the match of his dreams at the World Cup.

You'll have to wait until September 30 to see the film when it opens to the public.

Sep 12, 2005 at 08:32 o\clock

kuno becker succeeds in the u.s. despite his detractors (univision)

Mexico - With a story about ideals and dreams, Kuno Becker returns to Mexico to enjoy what he achieved with the film " Goal " and prove, to those that doubted, that his work would make him known in other places.

During an interview, the star of the film " Goal " said to be very excited to starr in the movie, its second part will start being shot next October and will finish in December.

The star of " Goal " stated that it will be premiered next October 14, it is interesting since we achieved to put together several important elements such as passion, faith and self-improvement, which will be a good incentive to get the audience's interest.

Despite saying several times that soccer is not his passion, he stated that this was one of the reasons that got him interested to work in this film, since he had to learn a lot about the sport.

Besides having the opportunity to work along important soccer players such as David Beckham, who is considered as one of the best.

Becker said that his relationship on the set with the soccer player is good; they exchanged points of view during the movie. Beckham's advice was very useful for his role.

"He asked me if he was a good actor and I asked him if I looked like a soccer player", Becker explained, who also said that one of the things he liked very much from the production is that his character " Santiago Muñez " had some similarities with him, such as perseverance.

He recalled that this was not his first starring role for the big screen in the U.S., he has starred in several films alongside A-list actors such as Antonio Banderas, Emma Thompson, Jason Scott Lee, Mark Dacascos and Esai Morales.

"I always had work", said the actor, who was known for his starring role in the soap opera " Soñadoras ", but returning to TV is not among his plans because he has other projects.

"There were people who told me that making a career in an other country was difficult, but I didn't care, and well, these are the first results of my effort", explained the actor.

Becker said "to those who thought that I would not make it, I showed them this project 'Goal' which I am very proud of".

Even though he is aware that this is just the first step for an international career, Becker assured that he is determined to continue with his film career, because just like his character, he has goals to achieve.

The actor highlighted that comparisons or criticism with other actors do not interest him, he knows that it will always happen and "it is positive that they talk about that because they will talk about the movie, which has quality and a really good plot".

Becker, who plans to work in this trilogy of movies about soccer, in which the last movie will include scenes from the World Cup Germany 2006, Kuno affirmed that he will continue working in projects he believes in, such as " Goal ".

On the other hand, he said that he has several offers to star in various films, he will decide about them when the time comes, despite the fact that they are not in Mexico, much less in Mexican soap operas, which he classified as excellent.

Sep 5, 2005 at 11:34 o\clock

field of dreams

Film and football have never been a winning combination. But now a massive new production, featuring top teams and superstars like Beckham and Ronaldo, aims to change all that. Can it work? Paul Kelso reports.

Football and Hollywood should be made for each other. Aside from similarities between the personnel - both industries are populated by overpaid principals who spend most of their time working out, shopping or being pursued by the paparazzi - they share a fiscal and sentimental interest in peddling dreams. Hollywood loves nothing more than a simple story with easily identifiable heroes and villains, ideally one that takes around 90 minutes to tell, and there are few narratives less complex than a football match. The details are subject to infinite variation, but the outcome of the tale is fixed. Someone will win, someone else will lose, and, thanks to the advent of penalties, no one needs to draw any more - not in the movies at any rate.

For all this, however, the world's favourite game is yet to receive a treatment that does it justice. Sport is problematic territory for film-makers because the drama inherent in the real thing is so compelling. It is a stiff task for any football fiction to match the drama produced by Liverpool and AC Milan in this season's Champions League final, for example, when the English side recovered from 3-0 down to win a shoot-out. Likewise, anyone who has followed England's biennial forays in World Cups and European Championships will know that the set-piece torture of penalty shoot-outs is rarely replicated at the multiplex.

Yet other disciplines have their grand celluloid moments. Boxing has several, which is not surprising given that no sport exposes more rawly the frailties of its protagonists. Rocky and Raging Bull are not only great sports movies, but great cinema, too. Seabiscuit, like the latter a dramatisation of a true story, is a marvellous rendering of a racing tale. Against these, the best football can offer is a couple of quirky comedies (Gregory's Girl and Bend It Like Beckham), celebrations of hooliganism (last year's Football Factory and the forthcoming Green Street) and the second world war PoW pastiche Escape to Victory, a cult classic in which the only thing less convincing than the acting from Bobby Moore and Pele is Sly Stallone's impersonation of a goalkeeper.

The latest attempt to provide the beautiful game with a movie to match is Goal!, the first part of a trilogy its makers hope will prove that it is possible to produce a credible tale of football at the very highest level. For once, a lack of money and access will not be a problem. Goal! is unlikely to receive critical acclaim, but it is precisely the film the football industry would like you to see. Wholesome, harmless and awash with Premiership stars, Goal! marks the coming together of Hollywood production values, the football establishment and corporate marketing clout. An independent production with heavyweight backing - think Leyton Orient funded by Roman Abramovich - Goal! has serious support. Distribution will be handled by Disney and its subsidiaries, merchandising by Warner Brothers, and a budget of £30m has given British director Danny Cannon (Judge Dredd, I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, TV series CSI) the ammunition to produce a movie that will be smiled upon in the boardrooms of clubs and governing bodies across Europe.

The most marked difference between Goal! and its predecessors is the support it has received from inside football. Where previous movies have been undermined by a lack of access, Goal! has been welcomed literally and figuratively into the dressing rooms of some of the world's biggest clubs. The world and European governing bodies Fifa and Uefa, the Premiership and the Football Association, and clubs including Newcastle United, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and AC Milan, have cooperated with producer Mike Jefferies and his team.

Jefferies says he made access a priority after discussing the difficulties of making a sporting movie with Oliver Stone, whose American football movie Any Given Sunday featured a fictional team. "We had been looking at this for a while and I just could not understand how the world's favourite game had not been celebrated in the way that other sports have," said Jefferies, speaking during a break from filming Goal 2 at Real Madrid's Santiago Bernabéu stadium.

"I sat down with Stone and asked him about the experience of making Any Given Sunday. His main point was that he made that movie in spite of the NFL [American football's governing body] rather than with their help, so he had to make up the competitions and the teams, all of which he felt detracted from the movie. When your team is called the Miami Sharks and everyone knows the real team is the Miami Dolphins, you have a problem."

Stone's advice led Jefferies to seek the approval of Fifa president Sepp Blatter. His pitch was simple: you help us to get access to players and teams, and we will help you try and break new markets in the USA and Asia. "I asked Blatter if he was interested in supporting a trilogy of football movies that would celebrate the game and stimulate an appetite in emerging markets, particularly Asia and the United States. We felt we could really help the game there, and all we really required of Fifa was to provide access, to make the problems go away, to introduce us where they could and help us to feature real teams, real competitions and real players."

Blatter's response could not have been more positive and, with doors opening as a result of Fifa's blessing, Jefferies set about planning a trilogy that tracks the odyssey of Santiago Munez (enthusiastically played by the likable and not uncute Kuno Becker), a Mexican emigré from a Los Angeles barrio. Goal! takes him to Newcastle United and the backdrop of the Premiership, while Goal 2 will see him tackling the Champions League with Real Madrid - a club whose predilection for collecting star players has caused them to be dubbed Hollywood FC. The concluding part will be filmed at next summer's World Cup, where we can predict young Santiago will have a decent tournament.

With such extensive support from inside the game, major commercial partners clamoured to back Goal!, most notably Adidas, the sportswear company that sponsors all the above-named clubs. The company's logo appears on screen almost as often as Becker, and most of the high-profile players lined up for cameo appearances - including three names straight from football's A list, David Beckham, Zinedine Zidane and Raúl - are contracted to the firm.

The production team have exploited their access to the full. In Goal! we see Becker training with the Newcastle first team, sitting alongside Alan Shearer, Kieron Dyer and the rest of the squad in the dressing room, and later chatting with Beckham in a bar packed with football luminaries including Sven-Goran Eriksson. Beckham's brief speaking role has reportedly drawn gasps at pre-release screenings (though it is not clear whether pure celebrity or surprise at his eloquence was the cause), and his presence in the first two films will be a major draw when Goal! opens in Asia, a key market in which brand Beckham has already cleaned up.

The extent of football's embrace of Goal! was clear as Jefferies and his team shot scenes at the Bernabéu. In the past two months the production team have trailed Real Madrid, filming the actors arriving at Japanese airports to delirious crowds, working with the players in training and warming up before friendly matches. At an exhibition match last week featuring all of Madrid's "galacticos", they filmed inside the dressing room at the Bernabéu, an inner sanctum that until now the club had prevented even being photographed. Jefferies and his crew could barely contain their delight at capturing the pre-match ritual of captain Raúl, during which he kisses each player on the forehead Becker, sat between Beckham and Brazilian superstar Ronaldo in front of a mocked-up locker with his name and photograph on it, was among those being kissed.

The result of this unprecedented access is a sporting authenticity that other football films have lacked. The action sequences, always the Achilles heel of sporting drama, are passable - though judging from his warm-ups at the Bernabeu, Becker is far from a natural. Footage taken at several of Newcastle's Premiership games last year has been spliced with passages that were rechoreographed using actors, with crowds painted in using CGI.

Jefferies, while comfortable with the authenticity of the action sequences, makes it clear that the primary objective was attracting new audiences with a human story rather than appeasing existing football fans. "The trilogy is a series of movies that take place against the backdrop of the football landscape, rather than a football movie," he says. "If we had made a football movie, I think our audience would have been narrowed rather than crossing over boundaries, gender, territories and demographics. To reach a wider audience you have to make a drama, and ours is this kid's odyssey told in three acts against the landscape of world football."

Goal! cannot be knocked for a lack of authenticity, but nor is it likely to trouble the American Academy when they hand out the end-of-season gongs. Like the average football commentary, few cliches are omitted as Santiago follows a path that begins at a hole in a fence on the Mexico-US border and ends with an implausible winning goal at St James's Park. Disney's involvement is appropriate. Were Santiago a cartoon deer rather than a doe-eyed footballer, the story could not proceed more sweetly. He defies his disapproving single-parent father to follow his football dream, gets spotted by a washed-up former player on holiday in LA and turns up penniless in Newcastle, only to flop in his early trials. Given a second chance, he resists the temptations of a pantomime world of fast cars, large watches, nightclubs, easy women and tabloid infamy to overcome adversity and triumph, pausing only to phone his gran from the touchline after each success.

Jefferies denies that the unashamed feelgood factor of the movie was a condition of the corporate support, though he admits that, had his central character owed more to George Best than Gary Lineker, he might have struggled. "Being honest about it, if we had wanted to weave into the story a positive take on some of the things that the governing bodies frown upon, then we would have faced some challenges, there's no doubt about that.

"But we have not been hampered creatively by our partners. There is darkness in there, but we wanted to create a film that would inspire kids. They are our target audience. There are countless success stories of kids in the ghettos of Sao Paulo or wherever for whom football is a ticket out. In that respect, the story is not fanciful."

Jefferies says he enjoyed working with the players, many of whom have profiles that match Hollywood's biggest stars and spend a considerable amount of time in front of the camera, be it playing or filming commercials. "Every guy that is a football fan has been tickled by this, and most of the footballers have enjoyed it. There is a little bit of glamour associated with the movie, which attracted them. The players at Real are world brands and they realise the movie will amplify their brand. The clubs, meanwhile, wanted to be involved because it will help them gain new fans across the world. As film-makers we are still pinching ourselves when we see things like Ronaldo spitting water in Kuno's face on camera. It is fabulous for us."

For all its predictability and commerciality, Goal! is difficult to dislike. Newcastle has probably not looked better for years, and it is safe to assume that Whitley Bay never has. A screenplay by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais guarantees some cheery dialogue, most of it placed in the mouths of an impressive supporting cast of established British actors including Sean Pertwee as a scheming agent, Stephen Dillane as Santiago's mentor, and Anna Friel in the role of an NHS nurse and love interest of Becker.

A soundtrack featuring original songs by Oasis and the Happy Mondays will also guarantee that extracts make their way on to Top of the Pops and MTV. Such crossover marketing will be the key to success, particularly when the film is released in the US, a country notoriously ambivalent about a sport that the rest of the world adores.

Should audiences in the US remain unmoved, however, Hollywood will be reluctant to tackle its most problematic game again in a hurry. It would be hard to make football more palatable and penetrable than this. Goodness knows what they would make of a film that showed them what it is really like.

· Goal! goes on general release on September 30.

Sep 5, 2005 at 11:33 o\clock

big match warm-up

Football fans are set for a real treat when soccer flick Goal! kicks off at the cinema, as these dazzling pictures prove.

They're taken from the teaser trailer currently running on the film's official website, which shows off the city of Newcastle in all its glory.

The film, shot on location on Tyneside as well as in London studios, follows the story of rising footballer Santiago Munez, whose talent is spotted in Los Angeles.

The young striker, played by Kuno Becker, achieves his dream when he comes to play for Newcastle United, but the party city proves to be a culture shock for him.

The 100 million dollar film is the first in a trilogy which will follow Santiago as he leaves the Magpies for Real Madrid and eventually gets to star in the World Cup.

It's not due to be shown in cinemas until September 30, but fans eager to get a taste of the film now can see the trailer at www.goalthemovie.com

The one-minute teaser includes breath-taking aerial shots of the Quayside and St James's Park.

We also get to see shots of Santiago running along the shore at Tynemouth and over the High Level Bridge, lapping up the attention on the pitch, and getting involved in some very wild nights out.

An insider who's seen early footage said: "It looks amazing, it's going to be a great film. No one has ever managed to make a really convincing football action film, so Goal! is going to be a real first."