THE BECKER BUGLE

Oct 14, 2005 at 00:22 o\clock

mexican premiere of goal - becker dazzles on the green carpet

Kuno assured he was satisfied with his work on the film Goal.

Mexican actor Kuno Becker, who stars in footy flick Goal, commented he was very happy to portray a role "which a lot of people wanted".

During an interview with te press during the green carpet premiere of the film in Mexico, Kuno said he felt satisfied with his work during the filming of the movie, as well as being chosen to star in film many actors had auditioned for.

Although he recognized there are actors better than him, he explained that he did everything that was in his reach, and gave the best of himself to give a great performances in this film.

"I trained for 4 months during 6 hours daily, I broke my ankles, fractured my foot, it was really hard, but now I'm here and I hope you like te movie", Kuno explained.

With respect to his performances, the film's producor Matt Barelle commented that "Kuno demonstrated a great professionalism on the set and in training sessiones he had, within the field showed the great capacity he posesses for soccer.

Kuno Becker shares credits in Goal with intertacional football stars like Roberto Carlos, Ronaldo, Zinedine Zidane and David Beckham.

Oct 13, 2005 at 23:59 o\clock

stone to star in soccer sequel

Hippy chick singer Joss Stone has landed a role alongside David Beckham in Goal! 2.

According to the Daily Mirror the 18-year-old will make her screen debut as a sexy temptress, who tries to poach the star of the film (Kuno Becker) from his long-term girlfriend, played by Anna Friel.

A pal of the Devon lass said: “Joss has dreamed of being a singer since she was a little girl, but she never thought her success would make her so hugely famous.

“She was surprised when the producers asked her to come in for a screen test - but she had a really good time doing it and gave it her best shot.

“She's really chuffed they've decided to go for her, even though she's not a trained actress.

The role is kind of different to the way most people see her, as she's going to have to play a bit of a bitch - that's what she's looking forward to the most!”

Goal! 2 is the second instalment of the soccer-movie trilogy, which started filming this week.

The hero, played by Mexican actor Kuno Becker, moves from Newcastle United to Real Madrid, where he meets Joss’s character.

England captain Becks, who has one line in the current movie, will have a much bigger part as Becker’s adviser in the Madrid team.

The source added: “Joss is the hottest girl around at the moment and everyone is really confident that she's going to be just as amazing on screen as she is when she's singing on stage.

“She'll probably have to wear killer heels though, so she'd better ditch the flip-flops and start practising her walk.”

Oct 13, 2005 at 23:49 o\clock

becker bends it

Kuno Becker had to train like a professional footballer to play the lead in the movie Goal!

EVERY bellow was greeted by an echo.

That was strange, given that the stadium was St James' Park.

Normally the home ground of English club Newcastle United is packed to the rafters on match day.

But on this February day, it was near empty.

It was not the freezing temperature that kept the fans away.

Only a 100-odd fans were there.

But they were all gathered around the Milburn Stand.

They were the extras recruited for the filming of the movie Goal! - the first chapter of a trilogy depicting the rags-to-riches tale of a young Latino who makes it big as a footballer with Newcastle United.

The filming crew, braving the cold since morning, were on their fourth take of a scene which had Newcastle and Liverpool players (doubles, of course) streaming out of the tunnel for the kick-off.

Kuno Becker (right), who plays the lead role of Santiago Munez, jogged onto the pitch to the thumbs-up sign from the gaffer, essayed by Marcel Iures.

Newcastle's current manager, Graeme Souness, was present to observe the filming along with the club's chairman, Freddy Shepherd.

Becker, an actor since 1996, largely in Mexican TV series, found the going tough.

It was because he wasn't a professional football player.

Like the other actors, he had to undergo football training sessions to look the part of a professional player.

Consultant and choreographer Andy Ansah, who played professional football in England for 12 years, helped him and the other actors.

Becker, of course, had to work harder than the rest.

He said he worked out regularly in the gym and trained on the pitch for five weeks, putting in more than five hours a day.

'It is hard for me. I last played football in school,' said Mexico-born Becker, 27.

'When you work with professional players, it's a different story.

'They really train hard and their technique is wonderful.

'My body is just not used to it. I have to accept that I will never be able to play like them.'

He added: 'For the movie, I had to try and attain a level close to theirs.

'I have tried hard to improve my technique, learn the basics and make it look real.

'But my body is beginning to question what I am doing.'

'This is a story not just about football, it is also about dreams and feelings.'

Becker is hoping that Goal! will take his acting career to a new high.

He is optimistic the movie will be a box-office hit.

The actor, who moved from Mexico to live in Los Angeles about two years ago, said: 'You never know what's going to happen.

'I have done my best.

'At the end of the day, you may think a movie that you have done will be super big. But for some reason, that may not be the case.'

Given his boyish looks, Becker has no dearth of female fans seeking a date with him. But he is reluctant to talk about his personal life.

'I've been in this business for a few years now,' he said. 'The one thing that I have learnt is to not talk about my personal life.'

For sure, he does not want to become a professional footballer.

'No way! Acting is enough for me!' he said.

  • Goal! opens in cinemas here tomorrow.


    He gets his kicks from playing the violin and acting

    KUNO Becker will never become a top professional footballer.

    That's because his talent lies in the arts.

    He has been playing the violin since the age of five and sharpened his skills on the instrument in Salzburg, Austria, and the Nacional de Musica in Mexico.

    He learned acting at the CEA of Televisa in Mexico.

    Becker said: 'I watch the sport on TV sometimes but I have never wanted to be a footballer.

    'I studied classical music, rode horses and the like.

    'The arts appeal to me naturally.'

    Football, though, is not a new experience to Becker.

    As a kid, he played the sport in school.

    His hero was Hugo Sanchez, the legendary Mexican striker who used to play for Spanish club Real Madrid.

    But as he grew up, the arts caught his imagination more.

    Acting in Goal! has stirred his passion for the game again.

    The Playstation 2 fanatic even got his name included in the starting lineup in the game Fifa 2005.

    But the filming took a heavy toll on his body.

    He sustained a bad ankle injury, among several minor ones.

    Like a professional footballer, however, he shrugged off the injury and got on with business.

    Breaking into a smile, he said: 'I love this job. I want to do as many scenes as I can.

    'The fact that this is a trilogy makes it even more enjoyable.'

  • Oct 13, 2005 at 23:39 o\clock

    kazakhstan offers the world its first blockbuster

    Complete with epic battles, fancy camerawork and breath-taking stunts, "Nomad" could be the latest, blood-drenched historical blockbuster coming to a cinema near you ... from Kazakhstan.

    In its bid to take on Hollywood, the film from the ex-Soviet Central Asian state boasts international stars, spectacular crowd scenes and a 33-million-dollar production budget. Versions in both the Kazakh language and in English will be released.

    Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev has made the film, which took two years to shoot, a pet project. Funding for "Nomad," which was shown for the first time on Monday at the opening of Almaty's second Eurasia International Film Festival, was funded almost entirely by the government and Kazakhfilm studios.

    "Nomad" recounts the suffering of 18th century Kazakh tribes under attack from the blood-thirsty Dzhungar people.

    That is until the young son of a tribal chief named Mansur -- played by Mexican actor

    That is until the young son of a tribal chief named Mansur -- played by Mexican actor Kuno Becker -- manages to unite Kazakh clans and defeat the enemy. A real historical character, who lived from 1711-1781, Mansur later became known as Ablay Khan and remains Khazakstan's revered national hero.

    "Nomad" follows Mansur's rise, amid a whirlwind of betrayals, revenge, beheadings and horseback stunts, all set against the wild steppes of Central Asia.

    Kazakh authorities left nothing to chance to ensure the success of the project, and liberally tapped into Hollywood's pool of blockbuster specialists

    The film, which was edited in Los Angeles, stars several action movie veterans, including Mark Dacascos and Jason Scott Lee. The executive producer is legendary film-maker Milos Forman , of "Amadeus" and "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest" fame.

    "Nobody thought that such a project was possible. Now, we can see how great the result is," said the film's producer, Los Angeles-based Ram Bergman.

    It has been anything but a smooth ride for "Nomad," though. The shooting had to endure strikes by technicians, changes of filmmakers and capricious weather, causing repeated delays.

    While Bergman said he was pleased with the result and confident of the film's chances, he admitted that additional scenes still had to be shot at the cost of a few more million dollars. Indeed, viewers here on Monday were only shown a working version.

    Nevertheless, Bergman said: "Hopefully, the final version will be presented in Cannes next year. It would be the perfect place."

    Hollywood also believes in the film, with Miramax studios having pledged 20 million dollars to distribute it in the United States, Canada and Britain.

    Oct 13, 2005 at 04:43 o\clock

    film trilogy tells tale of football (kuno's broken nose)

    The game of football is the centrepiece of a trilogy that leads to the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

    Goal, the first part of the trilogy, is a rags to riches story with a protagonist who dreams of playing international football, quite like real life.

    The film tells the tale of Santiago Munez, a talented football player who is spotted by a British talent scout and given a chance to play on the Newcastle United reserve team.

    Major challenge

    For actor Kuno Becker, the challenge was in keeping to the fitness levels of the professional footballers in the film, and training in the presence of ardent Newcastle fans at the team's home ground.

    "I had to try and become a footballer in three-four months. Most of these guys have been playing for 20 years, and it was hard for me," Becker said.

    "I broke my ankles, broke my nose, a lot of muscle injuries, everything," he added.

    Great opportunity

    For the football crazy actor Alessando Nivola, it wasn't the character but the opportunity that made the film appealing.

    "I took this job because they told me I would be able to train with Alan Shearer. I'd barely read the script and I accepted the job," Nivola said.

    "It was only later that I realised there was actually going to be a great character to play, and that there was a lot more to it than just that," he added.

    The movie also features many of Newcastle United's real life stars, as also cameos from David Beckham and Zinedine Zidane.

    The second film in the series will see Santiago signing for Real Madrid, while the third film will follow him through to the 2006 World Cup Finals in Germany.

    Oct 13, 2005 at 04:35 o\clock

    he shoots, he scores!

    Films and football - it's not exactly been a marriage made in heaven, has it? Think Sylvester Stallone in Escape To Victory or Sean Bean in When Saturday Comes? It was a no score on both counts.

    Goal! - this week's glossy big-screen soccer drama - is hell-bent on eradicating those execrable celluloid visions of the beautiful game.

    It aims to achieve a seamless blend of convincing on-the-field action for the hardcore fans, and a compelling personal drama with an appeal beyond a sporting audience.

    Goal! is the first of an ambitious trilogy, following the fictional rags-to-riches tale of a young Mexican player whose dazzling on-pitch skills lead him from the rough barrios of Los Angeles to the heady heights of British Premiership football - and a place on the team of Newcastle United. In the two planned sequels, he's transferred to Real Madrid before finding ultimate glory in the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

    With cameo roles from David Beckham, Alan Shearer and Zin dine Zidane, Goal! clearly has its eyes on an audience familiar with football's A-list.

    But its more lasting triumph should be the making of a new international star - the very camera-friendly, 27-year-old Kuno Becker, who plays the film's crucial central character, Santiago Munez.

    Mexican-born Becker, already a pin-up in his native Latin America and Spanish-speaking areas of the US, was picked after a series of auditions with a large cross-section of Hispanic actors who could play football. Yet once he'd landed the role, he clearly had his work cut out.

    He trained for five weeks - four or five hours of rigorous football practice a day - under the tutelage of football consultant and choreographer Andy Ansah, whose experience combines 12 years as a professional footballer player in England, and six seasons as coach/adviser on the Sky TV drama Dream Team.

    "Sure, it has been hard for me," says Becker.

    "I played football in school, but obviously not to this standard.

    "My body wasn't used to it and there are times during that process when your body says 'Hey, what are you doing to me!'

    "So obviously I'm never going to be able to play like those guys, but we were just trying to get as close as we could."

    Indeed, Becker truly suffered for his art while training for the role of a lifetime.

    He managed to break both his ankles and was temporarily laid up during his all-important physical preparation before the cameras rolled.

    "I ended up with stress fractures and I wasn't able to walk for weeks," he recalls with a grimace.

    "The doctor said to me, 'I hate to tell you this, but you're never going to be a footballer!' and that wasn't what I wanted to hear.

    "At the end of the day, those guys have been playing since they were three or four-years-old. I'm just lucky to have been given the opportunity to be a footballer in a movie and I'm a better footballer now."

    Becker speaks three languages - but Geordie wasn't one of them.

    "When we were filming in Newcastle, it took months for me to get the hang of the accent," he admits.

    But there were no language barriers when he got to film during a real game at St James' Park - Newcastle United's hallowed football ground.

    "It was amazing," says Becker. "Being in this stadium with 52,000 people and filming a scene there was unbelievable, the stuff of your dreams.

    "Football players are used to that buzz, that roar from the crowd - and that's why I think they cannot just leave the game, because of that feeling."

    When Becker's character, Santiago, arrives in Britain, life isn't just about muddy pitches and crunching body blows. Faced with the temptations that accompany any success, Santiago flirts with the glamorous lifestyle that inevitably opens up for a well-paid player in the modern Premiership - and he also finds a more romantic flirtation with local hospital nurse Roz, played by Friel.

    Becker won't divulge whether in real life he has a partner. In fact, the way he clams up at any query into his personal life, one suspects he's been burnt by the Latino paparazzi before now, and he's not about to tempt fate again as his fame begins to spread in Britain.

    Get him on the subject of the real football stars who made cameos in Goal!, however, and his guard comes down - especially when it comes to one Real Madrid midfielder with the somewhat-similar name of Beckham. And indeed, in the second part of the trilogy, Santiago himself will join the Real Madrid team.

    "Working with David Beckham was awesome," says Becker.

    "Everyone knows him the world over, so can you imagine filming a scene with him?

    "It was a scene in a nightclub, but I think the audience is going to get into it because we have a lot of famous, real players involved."

    Goal! opens today...

    Oct 13, 2005 at 04:26 o\clock

    football on film

    Over the years, many film makers have tried to make a decent football film, but like a defender lobbing the keeper from 40 yards, most of their efforts have been laughably wide of the mark.

    However, Hollywood's latest attempt, Goal!, looks set to put that right, not least because the football scenes look authentic.

    And if Goal! does strike box office gold, a lot of the credit will go to the football co-ordinator whose years of experience in the sport make the scenes look believable.

    That man is not a big name ex-international, but self-confessed ex-lower league journeyman striker, Andy Ansah.

    In a career largely spent with Southend and Brentford, Ansah's biggest achievement was being named the Sunday People's Division Two striker of the year.

    And when injury forced him to retire aged 30, his unlikely road to Hollywood began.

    "About 99% of footballers think they can be actors, me included, so I joined Sky's Dream Team as an extra," he told BBC Sport.

    "Within a few months, I was spending time behind the cameras with directors, coming up with new ways of shooting football, and I ended up as a producer."

    Six years and numerous films and adverts later, Ansah has got his biggest break yet, working on the Goal! trilogy, which follows the rise of Santiago Munez (Mexican actor Kuno Becker) from the barrios of Los Angeles to global stardom.

    To sum it up in a one-sentence movie industry pitch, Goal! is Billy Elliott with football boots, with cameo appearances by the Newcastle squad, David Beckham and Zinedine Zidane.

    Part One sees Munez get his break at Newcastle, alongside tearaway striker Gavin Harris (played with an impeccable English accent by American actor Alessandro Nivola), with later films set at Real Madrid and the World Cup.

    While Nivola has played all his life, Becker spent his teens training as a violinist rather than as a footballer, but such is Ansah's influence, you would never guess.

    "I had two months working with Kuno - we spent time training and even went clubbing with footballers, so he could learn everything he needed to walk and talk like a footballer," said Ansah.

    "He's an actor, but when he's out on a pitch surrounded by real footballers, it's important he doesn't feel inferior, or that would affect his acting. Ensuring that was part of my job."

    Becker suffered for his act, sustaining a broken nose and stress fractures of both ankles in filming, so when he does find himself playing alongside real players, he appears totally at home.

    While coaching actors to pass themselves off as footballers presented Ansah with one set of challenges, trying to get footballers to stick to a script was no easier.

    "These guys are worth millions of pounds, but if they don't stick to what's on my storyboard, they mess things up," he said. "I'd have to come on and tell them they're doing things wrong.

    "If you're used to playing football, you play off impulse. But playing with a camera on you and a crew of 100 people waiting for you to get it right is completely different."

    World football's heavyweights have given their backing to Goal!, and Ansah says this expert input is what sets the film apart.

    "This was made by real football people, not people who think they know football," he said.

    "It's backed by Fifa, Newcastle and some of the world's top players, so you've got to produce real football."

    Those real football people also include the staff and players of Real Madrid, where filming of Part Two has already begun.

    And that means Ansah is the man literally calling the shots for the Galacticos.

    "To work with the Beckhams and Rauls of this world is unbelievable," he admitted.

    "The fact they're taking instructions from me on how to play passes is ridiculous, I have to pinch myself. But while you're doing it, you have to look authoritative."

    While some of his contemporaries play out their final days sinking through the lower leagues, Ansah's future lies Stateside.

    When his work on Part 2 is finished, Ansah will be relocating permanently to Hollywood, where he already has a self-explanatory company called Soccer on Screen.

    Instead of Spotland and Bloomfield Road, he can look forward to Sunset Strip and Beverley Hills.

    "It's a crazy trip. I'm on a journey now that I could only have dreamed of," said Ansah.

    "If something goes wrong, I can call "cut" and do it again to get it right. I'm like a manager but without the worries."

    Truly, this is fantasy football.

    Goal! is released at cinemas across Britain on 30 September

    Oct 13, 2005 at 03:24 o\clock

    film interview - kuno becker 'goal!'

    A Film of Six Halves

    With a slew of football movies headed our way, Paul Byrne talks to Kuno Becker, star of one of the biggest of them all, 'Goal!'.

    Sports movies are generally crap. There are a few exceptions, of course. 'Raging Bull', 'Seabiscuit', 'Rocky', 'Kid Galahad', eh, 'Dodgeball', but, by and large, cinema has always struggled to capture the thrill of the real thing. In movies, the underdog invariably wins. And just before the credits, too.

    Of all the sports to make the uneasy leap to the big screen, the one that’s suffered most is probably football, unarguably the world’s most popular sport. Can you name one great football movie? Not even Pele could save 'Escape To Victory', which boasted the surreal and downright disturbing image of striker Bobby Moore and goalie Sylvester Stallone high-fiving?

    More recently, we’ve had 'There’s Only One Jimmy Grimble', 'Mike Bassett: England Manager', 'When Saturday Comes', that oddball outing with Alan Shearer and Robert Duvall (currently in a bargain bin near you), 'The Football Factory' and 'Green Street'. All were, for different reasons, and on different levels, crap. When football has worked on screen — 'Gregory’s Girl', 'Bend It Like Beckham' - it’s been more about what happens off the pitch rather than on.

    Nonetheless, Hollywood has decided that football is going to be the next big craze at your local multiplex. Arsenal fan Spike Lee is producing 'The Goal', in which US sitcom star Mario Lopez plays a footballer who escapes the slums of Rio to become the world’s best player. Walter Salles is currently setting up Linha de Pasne, telling the tale of four Brazilian brothers who attempt to become football stars. There’s also an untitled German portmanteau centred on football, and directed by Kenneth Branagh, Emir Kusturica, Jean-Jacques Beineix and Werner Herzog, whilst Michael Apted ('49 Up') is currently trekking through eight countries shooting a documentary about football and globalization.

    In America, the highpoint for football came when the US team beat England 1-0 at the 1950 World Cup in Brazil, and that fateful meeting was recently the subject of a teary-eyed retelling, 'Game of Their Lives', which featured real-life star Freddy Adu. The rise of football in the US was reflected in the recent Will Ferrell comedy, 'Kicking And Screaming', which tapped into the rise of Little League amongst America’s young. The term ‘soccer mum’ is very much part of everyday vocabulary in the US these days.

    It was the Top 5 success of 'Bend It Like Beckham' in the US (where the low-budget movie took $32million) that sparked cinema’s current craze for all things football. And the biggest gamble of them all is about to hit our screens at the end of this month. With a budget of just over $100million, the highly ambitious 'Goal!' is a trilogy following a young Mexican, Santiago Munez, (Kuno Becker) the Mexico-U.S. border to the 2006 World Cup in Germany. For the first installment, Santiago makes it as far as playing for Newcastle United. Lord Of The Pitch, anyone? "Yeah, it did strike me as a particularly bizarre and ambitious movie when I first heard about it," smiles the 27-year old Becker. "But you realized pretty early on that these people were serious, that they were aiming high right from the start. I wouldn’t have signed on otherwise."

    Aiming high is something producer Mike Jeffries — a dotcom millionaire who was once linked to a takeover bid of his favourite team, Liverpool FC — knew he had to do after sitting down with Oliver Stone to talk sports and the director’s American football drama, 'Any Given Sunday'. Stone made it clear that having to come up with a fictitious team — The Miami Sharks — and a fictitious league competition meant audiences were never going to buy into his movie. And so Jeffries went straight to Fifa president Sapp Blatter, and let him know that his trilogy would be designed to stimulate an appetite for football in emerging markets, particularly Asia and the US. Unsurprisingly, Blatter liked what he heard and soon Jeffries had the involvement of both Fifa and Uefa, the Premiership and Football Association, and clubs such as Newcastle United, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and AC Milan.

    With sponsors also including Adidas, Major League Soccer and Coca-Cola as well, 'Goal!' has taken product placement to new heights. It’s the first time that Hollywood production values have come together with the football establishment and corporate marketing clout. Which means the resulting trilogy could turn out to be three 90-minute commercials masquerading as entertainment, something everyone involved was certainly aware of, including Alessandro Nivola ('Face/Off'), who plays blond-haired, smoothtalking agent Gavin Harris. "I wasn’t sure what to make of it all at first," he says, "but then I went along to a few matches and realized that everything is covered in logos. So you’re certainly being authentic by having all these big-name brands all over the place. It’s not like it looks false. Which reflects more on the world of football than it does on this movie."

    The makers’ intentions for 'Goal!' were made clear early on when original director Michael Winterbottom was replaced after five weeks with the Hollywood-raised Danny Cannon. So, rather than have the man who brought us 'Welcome To Sarajevo', 'Jude', '24-Hour Party People', 'In This World' and 'Nine Songs', the producers opted instead for the man who brought us 'Judge Dredd'...and 'I Still Know What You Did Last Summer.' "I think it was a mutual decision, you know," says Becker. "I wasn’t involved yet with the movie when this happened, but I get the impression that Michael had one vision for the movie and the producers had another. Simple as that."

    With the second installment currently been shot at Real Madrid’s stomping ground, Jeffries managed to be the first to take a camera inside the team’s dressing room at the Bernabeu. The final installment will, naturally enough, be shot around the 2006 World Cup in Germany. "I actually thought, when I signed up for this first movie, the other two were merely listed to impress us," finishes Nivola, "but I quickly realized they were serious. Hey, I’m a football fan. I’m having a ball. Hopefully, that will come across…"

    Oct 13, 2005 at 03:17 o\clock

    FILM STARS JOIN FOOTY HEROES ON THE PITCH

    'Goal' movie stars Kuno Becker and Alessandro Nivola have revealed that they had to join real Newcastle players on the pitch during filming to make the football flick look realistic.

    The pair, who feature in part one of a trilogy which follows a young Mexican footballer who rises from the streets to play for the The Magpies, told Soccer AM they shook hands with the likes of Steven Gerrard and Celestine Babayaro when the final whistle went after a live match.

    "The first time we filmed with the Newcastle team they kitted me up and I had to crouch down behind the advertising boards for the whole match. At the final whistle we came popping up from behind these boards prancing gingerly out to the middle of the pitch," Nivola said.

    "We'd been told by the producers that everyone knew the score. I think I came running up to Babayaro and put him in a headlock and he just sort of looked at me. There we were with 65,000 Geordie fans and us going: "C'mon!".

    The movie, which features cameos from David Beckham and Alan Shearer, also saw the pair undergo vigorous training.

    Becker added: "I really didn't play a lot of football when I started this so I really had to train my butt off to play the part. I was training for a lot of months, a lot of hours a day."

    Oct 13, 2005 at 02:59 o\clock

    beckham suffers from movie set nerves

    David Beckham suffered from nerves while making his movie debut on the set of Goal!

    Kuno Becker, who plays footballer Santiago Munez in the film, has revealed that the Real Madrid star was determined to be perfect.

    "David cracked a lot of jokes when we met, but he was nervous," Becker told the Sunday Mirror.

    "He was asking me for tips and advice beforehand. He told me his role meant a lot to him and he wanted to be perfect."

    Oct 13, 2005 at 02:55 o\clock

    what a GOAL!

    After three goals at Blackburn Rovers, the stars of Newcastle United were out in force for the Newcastle premiere of new movie GOAL! on Sunday night.

    Graeme Souness and his squad dashed back from Ewood Park to attend the special screening at the Odeon in Newcastle's Gate entertainment complex, and were cheered by happy Geordie fans as they received the red carpet treatment.

    Joining the Magpies were the stars of the movie, including Kuno Becker, who plays lead character Santiago Munez, and Alessandro Nivola, who takes the part of team-mate Gavin Harris.

    Newcastle World TV caught up with both men PLUS Graeme Souness and Lee Clark.

    GOAL! is directed by British born Danny Cannon and follows a young Mexican illegal immigrant in the USA (Kuno Becker) through his youthful dreams of being a professional footballer through to him signing to Newcastle United and encountering the new challenges of a life of fame and possible fortune in the Premiership.

    With an all star cast including Alessandro Nivola and Brit stars Sean Pertwee, Kieran O'Brien and Stephen Dillane and with guest appearances from the most famous footballers in the world including French World Cup winning captain Zinedine Zidane, current England captain David Beckham and Spanish captain Raul as well as Shearer and Owen, GOAL! is already commanding column inches and TV air time.

    The screenplay is based on a story by Mike Jefferies and Adrian Butchart and was written by EMMY & BAFTA award winners Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais (The Commitments, Never Say Never Again, Auf Wiedersehen Pet, The Likely Lads, Porridge.)

    GOAL! is produced by Mike Jefferies and Matt Barrelle of milkshakefilms. The film is distributed in the UK by Buena Vista International (UK) and is on general release from Friday, September 30.

    Oct 13, 2005 at 02:44 o\clock

    it's tinsel-toon! - newcastle goal premiere

    The stars of new football movie GOAL! are confident it will prove a big hit with Newcastle United fans after attending the Tyneside premiere.

    Kuno Becker, who plays lead character Santiago Munez, joined fellow cast members to receive the red carpet treatment outside the Odeon at Newcastle's Gate complex.

    He said: "People are really responding well to the film which is great. "It was a lot of fun, but also a lot of hard work for me because I had to train really hard for the football scenes.

    "We wanted the football scenes to be realistic and exciting. People are saying big things about the film and people of all ages are liking it.

    "St. James' Park is a really beautiful stadium and just to run out on that pitch and meet the likes of Graeme Souness and the players and hear 50,000 people cheering was amazing."


    Alessandro Nivola, who plays team-mate Gavin Harris, added: "I accepted this job because it meant training with Alan Shearer - I hadn't even read the script!

    "It was a schoolboy fantasy come true in many ways, but it was also exhausting."