FLASH INFORMATIVO-KUNO NEWS

Apr 20, 2006 at 09:20 o\clock

goal! star riding mexican wave

Rising star Kuno Becker has a confession to make. Before he signed up as the lead role in feel- good soccer movie Goal!, the Mexican-born star didn't like football.

And after completing the film?

"I hate it more than ever. I think it? crap!" Becker told Sunday News on a recent visit to Auckland to promote the film.

"I actually don't like it, I find it boring," Becker says of the sport at the heart of Goal!

"That's why I wanted to play the part, I wanted the challenge." Luckily for Becker - and for others who aren't football fans - it's not necessary to like football to like the film.

In fact, much like Kiwi film The World's Fastest Indian, it's a human story of triumph and dreams.

"That's the great thing about it - you don't have to be a soccer fan to actually like the film.

"I think it works because of the story - everybody relates to it," Becker says.

"To be honest it's a very beautiful film. A feel-good movie.

"It makes you feel something. It makes you get a little bit emotional.

"It's funny, I didn't think girls were going to like it, to be honest. It was a pleasant surprise."

His character seems destined to follow his father's path in life - labouring at menial jobs to earn just enough money to support his family. Naturally gifted, his amazing talent on the soccer field was wasted in recreational league games while he could only dream of playing on the world stage.

But when a scout discovers his talent and gets him a try-out with one of England's premier soccer clubs, Newcastle Utd, Santiago must choose between his father's fate and his own destiny.

While Becker doesn't share his character's passion for football, he can relate to living up to a family's expectations.

Becker was a classical violinist before he decided to throw in music and follow his passion of being an actor.

He became a star in Mexico after landing a role on a popular soap that made him a teen idol in his home country.

But his parents were initially disappointed in his switch from classical musician to soap star.

"I have a great family. They are very supportive of me.

"But when I was acting, it was a big change from classical music to being on TV - they thought it was cheesier than being a classical musician."

But they've come round now that Becker is an international film star. Goal! is a massive hit already in Mexico and Britain, and Goal! 2 and 3 already in production.

To convincingly play a professional footballer, Becker trained for five weeks, for four or five hours a day, and also did physical training in the gym.

The actor said he's never been so fit in his life. "I was fit. I had to train so many hours, and I had this special diet - it was very tough!" The movie was filmed in Newcastle and the famous Newcastle club opened up its doors to the producers to add authenticity to the film.

Real Madrid star David Beckham even has a cameo role.

"It was like, 'Who the heck are you'?" Becker jokes. "At the end of the day, I knew who he was. He's a great guy.

Apr 20, 2006 at 09:12 o\clock

kuno becker anotador de goles

El joven actor Kuno Becker es uno de esos casos interesantes que se le presentan a Hollywood. En México, su tierra natal, lo conocen por dos cosas: ser actor de telenovelas juveniles y ser un diestro del violin. A los 17 años inició su carrera como artista exclusivo de Televisa y terminó trabajando en 15 telenovelas por un lapso de seis años y medio. Muchas de sus fans todavía lo recuerdan en el papel que lo lanzo a la fama en la televisión mexicana en la telenovela "Soñadoras".

Incursiona en el cine junto al director Antonio Serrano en la cinta  Lucía, Lucía y a partir de esa producción se ha mantenido trabajando logrando ocupar un lugar especial en Hollywood. "He estado trabajando mucho ultimamente. Gracias a Dios me he mantenido ocupado," dice el actor, quien en estos meses ha estado promocionando la pelicula Goal de los studios Disney. En la historia interpreta a Santiago, un muchacho mexico-americano de Los Angeles quien sueña con jugar en un equipo internacional de fútbol hasta que es seleccionado para jugar con el club Newcastle United.

Goal es una cinta que tiene gran valor y significa mucho en la vida del actor. "le pusimos muchas ganas," dice, "entrenamos muchísimo para hacerlo lo mejor posible." El actor entrenó de 4 a 5 horas diarias en Londres con el equipo Newcastle United, como un jugador más. "Hasta me crecieron las piernas como futbolista," comenta entre risas. Por 3 meses se sometió a todo el entrenamiento riguroso de un jugador de fútbol, con la intensidad que lo hacen los jugadores profesionales. Ha vivido en carne propia los quehaceres del deporte más popular del mundo y se lo ha pasado viviendo entre Londres y Los Angeles. De hecho, ha estado en Londres desde el mes de septiembre entrenando arduamente para el rodaje de la secuela de Goal. La idea es hacer 3 películas y Disney pretende grabar la tercera durante el mundial de este año en Alemania.

En los paises en los que la pelicula ya se estrenó, los fanáticos del fútbol están aplaudiendo el buen trabajo del actor y para el mes de Mayo se espera el estreno en los Estados Unidos. Kuno tiene bien claro lo que esta película puede hacer en su vida, porque lo pondrá en el lente de Hollywood y de los apasionados seguidores del deporte más importante del mundo.

Kuno es músico, pero la actuación le apasionó más que la música. "Dejé de tocar el violin hace mucho tiempo", dice, "no soy músico en realidad". Y este comentario es modesto de un artista a quien de jovencito se le vio ofrecer recitales a nivel profesional. Fue un diestro del violin, aunque no lo quiera admitir. Sin embargo, el actor reconoce que la disciplina musical le ayudó a llegar al nivel de actuación al que ahora ha llegado. "Yo creo que la música me ayudó a ser disciplinado y a esforzarme más", concluye. Esa disciplina lo hace ser objetivo y decidido en lo que quiere. Kuno Becker no es un actor comun, es un anotador de goles.

Apr 20, 2006 at 09:06 o\clock

GOAL! THE DREAM BEGINS - kuno's best

"Yeah, it's kinda weird huh - a German name for a Mexican guy?" laughs up-and-coming young actor Kuno Becker down the line. "My grandfather was German, so that's why. Growing up with the name 'Kuno', it's difficult to even order a pizza in Mexico City, you know," he adds, erupting into more laughter.

Becker plays young soccer virtuoso Santiago Munez in this unashamedly feel-good fairytale about a Mexican who gets a shot at the big time in the UK premier league. An illegal immigrant who works with his father tending rich people's gardens, Santiago loves soccer and plays with his local East LA team at every opportunity. One day former club player Glen Foy (Dillane), who's attending his grandson's match nearby, spots Santiago in action and recognises instantly that the boy is a natural, and that, with a bit of guidance and some luck, he could make it as a professional.

Foy calls in a favour and Santiago travels a long way around the world to follow his dreams. Even so, there are many obstacles to overcome along the way - not the least being the prospect of actually making it in the big league, and everything that comes along with it.

The young actor, already well established with Mexican TV audiences but otherwise an unknown, being given a chance at a big leg-up, Becker says it's not hard to draw a parallel between his career path and Santiago's. "I relate to the character in many ways: we all have dreams; I have my dreams - which are to be a part of good stories, and to keep working as an actor, playing interesting characters; and Santiago has his dream of becoming a soccer star. So yeah, I definitely relate to him in many ways, and the great thing is I think that a lot of people in the audience are gonna relate to the character too, you know? But it is a fairytale; it's a feel-good movie, but it's also a lot of fun; it's not too complex."

Kuno Becker likes to point out that being a movie star isn't always that glamorous a profession, when you have to shoot for days on end in a freezing cold puddle of mud. "It was rainy, it was miserable, it was cold. It was so tough, it was very physical; I had to like fall in the mud 12 times, every half an hour; so it was pretty bad, but you know what? It was worth it, because it looks amazing on the screen; it looks real." Becker laughingly confirms an assistant producer's observation that grown men were seen to be in tears during that particular week or so of shooting. "Yeah I know; I broke my nose in one of those scenes, I broke my ankles during the training - but it was worth it, because I wanted the challenge of playing the part, but physically it was the hardest thing I've ever done."

Becker goes on to point out that the brutal tackles his character receives look very real on screen because they were real. "Actually we didn't rehearse a lot of those tackles, and that's why we had a couple of accidents; but it's real, looks real, but sometimes you got to be careful with that," he adds, diplomatically, noting that some of the footballers had a tendency to be a little too enthusiastic, "because if somebody gets injured then, you know, we got to stop shooting the film. We took the risk, and everything was sort of OK - it worked, but, most of the time it's better to be a bit more cautious," says Becker, before exploding into another outburst of good-natured laughter.

Besides getting to meet David Beckam (onscreen and off) Kuno Becker cites the experience of working with real-life football stars in some scenes as a big help - not just for his performance, but also for the degree of reality their presence confers up on the film itself. "It was great, because first of all they were very nice to us, and it makes the story a lot stronger to have the real players in the film. I trained for about four months, before we shot the film, five, six, seven - even eight hours a day, it was pretty tough. I broke both of my ankles; I had a stress fracture and couldn't walk for about two months."

To add to the realism, many of the matches that take place in the film were actually shot at the real locations. Becker says he definitely felt as though he was walking on sacred turf. "It was great to see how it feels to run onto that pitch, with thousands of people cheering at you, or the team, you know. It was a lot of fun, too, as an actor, deciding what this guy - who's basically a gardener from another country, you know - is gonna do, how he's gonna react, once he discovers fame, and starts getting all this money and chicks and stuff."

Becker is also at pains to point out that, while a lot of football matches are covered during the course of the film, "The great thing is that the action scenes, the football matches, every one of them has a lot to do with the story. Danny Cannon did a great job, putting it all together, with the music and everything. He's a big soccer fan too, pretty crazy, you know, shouting from the sidelines - but he doesn't play much; he's really bad!"

Apr 20, 2006 at 09:00 o\clock

kuno becker kicks off career in goal!

Football and film share the rare ability to turn a talented performer into an overnight sensation. So it’s appropriate that Touchstone Pictures’ new sports movie “Goal! The Dream Begins” an eagerly awaited rags to riches drama set against the world of soccer, should feature an actor who is unknown in English language cinema.

But in his native Mexico, and to Spanish speaking audiences beyond, Kuno Becker is most closely associated with his performance as the handsome playboy son of a wealthy father in the drama series "Soñadoras." It is this role above all that has made him a pin-up hunk in large areas of Latin America and Spanish speaking areas of the US.

Acclaimed as one of the best young stars in a burgeoning Mexican film industry, his experience ranges from theatre, short films and movies such as "Lucia Lucia," "Once Upon a Wedding" and "The Nomad."

English speaking audiences would have seen Becker playing the villainous role of Gustavo Santos in Christopher Hampton’s harrowing 2003 drama "Imagining Argentina." A taut and powerful film, it recounted the atrocities committed by the military junta that ruled Argentina in the 1970s.

If "Imagining Argentina" explored the dark side of Becker’s persona, relinquishing his teenybopper image, the international profile that "Goal!" will give him is a step up again. Becker plays the charming and clear-eyed Santiago, a Los Angeles based Latino whose dazzling football skills take him to the north east of England, and a trial with Premiership contender Newcastle United. Throwing himself into the challenge of portraying a talented professional footballer Becker pushed himself to, and sometimes beyond, the limit.

"It’s been hard for me," he explains. "I played football in school but obviously not to this standard. When you start working with real football players and a professional team it’s a whole different story. They really train hard, they have technique, and it’s just very different. My body wasn’t used to it. But I tried very hard. Obviously I’m never going to be able to play like them, but we were just trying to get as close as we could. And there are times during that process when your body says ‘hey, what are you doing to me!’. It’s hard but we’re going to get there."

The commitment Becker has shown to the project is more than just physical, with his involvement in "Goal!" scheduled to span three films in an ambitious trilogy. Producer Matt Barrelle recently announced that the first film would deal with Santiago’s rags to riches journey from the barrios of LA to the Geordie heartlands. The second will see him shine in a move to a European club before triumphing on the biggest stage of all, at the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

"I love my job," Becker nods, "and I really want to be in as many scenes as I can. Over three films I can really think about putting a character through a process, a longer process than just a single movie. It makes the whole thing more interesting and enjoyable for me."

Just what toll three films will take on the 27 year old’s body is another matter. He admits he has taken his fair share of knocks so far, pushing himself in accordance with the demands of director Danny Cannon and football co-ordinator, and former pro, Andy Ansah.

"I got this ankle injury," Becker recalls, "and the doctor said to me then: ‘I hate to tell you this but you’re never going to be a footballer!’. I was like ‘no kidding!’ At the end of the day, those guys have been playing since they were three or four years old. It’s how you do it, you live with it, and do it from the very beginning. But I love my job, and it actually gives me the opportunity to be a footballer in the film."

"`Goal!’ is a story about football, but it’s a story about emotion too," adds Becker. "It’s a story about everything, about goals, about dreams, about making it. That’s the most important thing for me, that’s what I want to see in this film."

And that in the end is what will make "Goal!" a success, striking the all-important balance between creating convincing action on the field and a compelling drama off it. Kuno Becker is certain to be even better known to cinema audiences at the end of the process than he was at the beginning, but the success that he has found to date has not distracted him to the important aspects of telling a story on screen.

"I think when you go and watch a film with a sporting theme, even if you’re not really into those sports, you can still go and watch a nice story told with emotion and strong characters. That, I think, is the key."

And that, in the end, is the goal.

Apr 20, 2006 at 08:52 o\clock

shot for biggest game, scored its biggest film

SYDNEYSIDER Matt Barrelle has gone from kicking a ball on Bondi Beach to producing the biggest feature film yet about soccer.

After watching Brazil beat England in the 2002 World Cup, Barrelle and an English friend, Mike Jefferies, decided to ditch everything to make a movie about the romance of football.

"At that point, we thought, 'Where is Rocky in soccer boots?' - we have got to make this film," Barrelle said during a brief visit to Sydney yesterday.

"So we camped out in Hollywood, and annoyed people to tears for two years, trying to convince the big studios the world needed a big story about football."

The pair ended up convincing a galaxy of football stars to join the cast, including David Beckham - in his first speaking role in a feature film - Ronaldo, Zinedine Zidane and former England captain Alan Shearer.

The finished product is called Goal!, the first in what Barrelle describes as a "rags to riches" trilogy about a Latin American teenager, played by Mexican actor Kuno Becker, plucked from the streets to become a professional footballer in Europe.

It includes cameo appearances by AC/DC guitarist Angus Young - as a Newcastle United football fan - and the actor and part-owner of Sydney FC Anthony LaPaglia, who also had a role in casting Becker, Barrelle said.

"As part of his trial, Kuno was asked to play with Hollywood United, a team LaPaglia plays in in Los Angeles with the film's director Danny Cameron and [singer] Robbie Williams," Barrelle said. "He scored a winner past LaPaglia - and at that point he said, 'get that guy on'."

Becker tells a different version of his on-field casting. "They just said I wasn't good enough," he joked yesterday. "They kept casting new people and I think they hated me." But, after weeks of gruelling training with a coach, Becker made the grade, although he had both ankles and his nose broken during filming.

"The guys I was playing with in the film are serious professionals. I am not a football player. They were great guys, but very tough," said Becker, who gave up a promising career as a violinist to take up acting 10 years ago.

The final part of the Goal! trilogy will be shot at the World Cup in Germany this year. Unprecedented co-operation from FIFA, the sport's governing body, has allowed the filmmakers intimate access to the professional football world.

"It has just opened the doors of authenticity, using real teams, real clubs, real players and real stadiums, and once we had that you can really get an insight into that life," Barrelle said.

He has also made it a personal mission to include the Socceroos in the third film.

Apr 20, 2006 at 08:49 o\clock

socceroos to star in film

AUSTRALIA'S World Cup soccer team and local fans will feature in a major Hollywood film – Goal! 3.

Australian producer Matt Barrelle, who has been a soccer fan all his life, is behind the film.

"We shoot Goal! 3 at the World Cup this year and we have actually changed the script, rolling a bit of Australia in there," said Barrelle, who grew up in Bondi but now lives in Los Angeles.

"So you will see Australia on the big screen, especially the fan element."

The first film in the Goal trilogy opens nationally this month, following the story of aspiring American soccer player Santiago Munez (Kuno Becker).

Munez heads to England to try his luck there and manages to score a spot on the Newcastle United team.

"When I was a kid I did play football (soccer) at school but I was obviously nothing close to a professional football player," said lead actor Becker, who is one of Latin America's biggest young stars.

"So I really had to train a lot of hours every day to get ready for this."

Barrelle said Australia's World Cup entry would definitely help the film.

"I am so happy we got in," said Barrelle, 34.

"We didn't plan this in the beginning and thought it was going to be a hard ride.

Barrelle predicts that by the end of 2006, soccer will be more popular in Australia than rugby union and AFL, but not rugby league.

"Because of the World Cup, football will jump from being the fourth most popular sport here into second spot," he said.

"I am sure it is going to come flying through."

Barrelle added that although underdogs, Australia had a "sneaky chance" of winning the World Cup.

Goal! features Australian soccer fans Anthony LaPaglia and AC/DC's Angus Young in cameos.

The film also had the support of FIFA, helping Barrelle secure international soccer stars David Beckham, Raul Gonzalez and Zinedine Zidane.

While Goal! is yet to open in Australia, production is nearly finished on Goal! 2 and pre-production on the third instalment is well underway.

"This is a great story with the backdrop being a professional footballer," said Barrelle.

"We knew we had enough story to create a trilogy."

Apr 20, 2006 at 08:43 o\clock

becker: the new beckham?

Hollywood has churned out countless rags-to-riches sports movies over the years, but the soccer-themed "Goal!" is one of the better ones.

This is an uplifting and heartfelt tale about a dreamer who gets his chance to realise it through hardship and determination. At the age of 10, Santiago Munez (Kuno Becker) crossed the border from Mexico to the United States illegally with only one thing on his mind: becoming a soccer star.

Ten years later, Santiago is playing with his local Los Angeles club when a scout, former British football star Glen Foy (Stephen Dillane) discovers him and offers him the chance to train for Newcastle United in the English Premier League - much to the chagrin of his father (Tony Plana).

Santiago discovers that the path to success is a bumpy road as he contends with life in a foreign land, difficult team-mates, physical set-backs, the temptations of fame and new love.

Directed by Danny Cannon (executive producer of TV's "CSI"), "Goal!" tells a simple, old-fashioned story but manages to sweep viewers up in the action.

Newcomer Becker is an absolute star, and much of the success of "Goal!" can be attributed to his electric screen presence. His line delivery is natural and his unknown celebrity status makes the character more convincing than if the filmmakers had cast a bigger name.

Producers Mike Jefferies and Matt Barrelle gained the support of FIFA (Federation Internationale de Football Association) and were allowed to use real teams, real players and real locations to make "Goal!" as authentic an experience as possible.

Cannon's slick direction is backed by an energetic soundtrack, including tracks from Zero 7, UNKLE and The Happy Mondays.

If you want an entertaining story with a heart of gold that the whole family can enjoy, this is it. "Goal!" kicks the ball out of the park.

Apr 20, 2006 at 08:36 o\clock

gol!...kuno tira a ganar

Kuno Becker tira a ganar con esta gran producción que retoma la pasión que provoca el futbol, sobre todo ahora que vivimos la efervescencia por la víspera del Mundial.

La carrera de Kuno Becker está marcada por los cambios radicales. Primero, después de años de estudiar violín, a los 16 decidió declinar mejor por la actuación y comenzó a estudiar; y ya cuando se consolidaba como estrella joven de las telenovelas decidió dejarlo todo y empezar de cero y abrirse camino en el cine.

Hoy, a sus 27 años, Kuno Becker cosecha los frutos del cambio, pues luego de pelear en varias audiciones consiguió el protagónico de la trilogía ¡Gol!, con la dirección de Danny Cannon y la producción de los estudios de Disney.

La cinta, que tiene como marco la pasión del futbol, cuenta con la presencia de estrellas del balompié mundial como David Beckham, Raúl González o Zinedine Zidane, entre otros, para contar la historia de Santiago, un chavo de origen mexicano que desde niño emigra a Estados Unidos junto con su padre y abuela.

“Cuando comenzamos la filmación el director me preguntó si no estaba nervioso, porque esta película es de gran presupuesto. La mayoría del tiempo aparezco en pantalla. Pero creo que para mí representó una gran oportunidad y, sobre todo, la posibilidad de crecer como actor”, explica

Kuno Becker.

El protagonista de telenovelas como Soñadoras asegura que para él ¡Gol” es una cinta intimista, aspiracional, con un mensaje positivo “que dejará un buen sabor de boca a los espectadores, y no sólo a los que les guste el futbol”.

De niño, recuerda, jugó futbol, pero nunca fue un apasionado, más bien se la pasaba estudiando música clásica. “Pero eso es lo que me gusta de poder ser actor, el crear personalidades que no soy, en este caso de futbolista y, para hacer más realista el papel, tuve que entrenar en promedio cinco horas al día. En algunas ocasiones me lastimé los tobillos. Fue un proceso largo y complicado, pero creo que el resultado valió la pena”.

Kuno ha participado en cintas como La hija del caníbal, de Antonio Serrano, e Imaginando a Argentina, con Antonio Banderas y Emma Thompson. Pero ¡Gol! es su primer largometraje con repercusión internacional.

Sueños deportivos

¡Gol!, la primera parte de la trilogía, dirigida por Danny Cannon engloba los sueños de los chicos que buscan la gloria sobre un rectángulo de pasto.

Kuno Becker encarna a Santiago, un chico mexicano que busca oportunidades en Los Ángeles y es descubierto por un cazatalentos inglés que lo lleva a jugar al Newcastle United, de la Liga Premier inglesa.

Lejos de ser un filme positivista, ¡Gol! trata sobre los sueños y su encarnación terrenal. Una saga dinámica que encantará tanto a las fanáticas de Kuno como a los obsesos por el balompié.

La película se desarrolla en un ambiente sumamente realista, grabado en estadios históricos y aderezado con la presencia de verdaderas estrellas.

Dividida en tres capítulos, ¡Gol! arranca en Inglaterra, y sus posteriores dos terceras partes llevarán a Santiago a fichar por los galácticos de Madrid y cerrará en las festividades del Mundial 2006 en Alemania.