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7,0/10
5943
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Dieser Dokumentarfilm handelt von dem berühmten brasilianischen Fußballer Pelé, seinem Perfektionismus und dem mythischen Status, den er schließlich erlangte.Dieser Dokumentarfilm handelt von dem berühmten brasilianischen Fußballer Pelé, seinem Perfektionismus und dem mythischen Status, den er schließlich erlangte.Dieser Dokumentarfilm handelt von dem berühmten brasilianischen Fußballer Pelé, seinem Perfektionismus und dem mythischen Status, den er schließlich erlangte.
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A really captivating watch. Great mix of archive footage and interview material to create one of the best football documentaries I've seen.
I liked it was not only about football, it was about politics and the importance of football in Brazil. It's a great way to create conflict but also tension in the story.
I learnt a lot about Pelé but I wish there was more to learn about him as a person. I feel the documentary did not take a inside view of Pelé, but rather looking from the outside. It was more about the impact of Pelé in most cases which of course needs to be included.
I've seen some other football documentaries and this one is by far the best one I've seen.
I liked it was not only about football, it was about politics and the importance of football in Brazil. It's a great way to create conflict but also tension in the story.
I learnt a lot about Pelé but I wish there was more to learn about him as a person. I feel the documentary did not take a inside view of Pelé, but rather looking from the outside. It was more about the impact of Pelé in most cases which of course needs to be included.
I've seen some other football documentaries and this one is by far the best one I've seen.
I wish it was a mini series like the Last Dance instead of a movie. It could say more about his personal life and also political life in his time. But still, it was very informative for me and I don't agree with other bad comments about telling politics. Football is never separated from politics in any country, so without telling about politics, it is impossible to understand Pele or any other players.
The 2022 Football World Cup has just finished with Argentina's talismanic striker Lionel Messi being hailed by many as the "G. O. A. T." or Greatest Of All Time for his performances throughout the competition. This documentary on a different generation's superstar, Brazil's Pelé, makes a different and I would say stronger case for the title with a player his countrymen called The King. This Netflix production, with Pelé an active participant, relates his remarkable story rising from poverty to becoming one of the most successful and wealthy sportsman of his time with Mohammad Ali his only comparable contemporary in terms of worldwide reach.
The film concentrates on his international career and particularly his exploits at the World Cups of 1958, 1962, 1966 and of course his climactic final appearance at the 1970 tournament held in Mexico. This is the first World Cup I personally remember watching as a boy. The matches were played in fantastic-looking stadia, there were great teams competing with great players - besides Brazil's all-stars, there were strong representatives from Europe, like England, the holders, Italy and Germany (or West Germany as they were then) and from South America Peru and Uruguay. My parents had just got our first ever colour television and the teams in their classic strips positively glowed out from the small screen into our living room. The football was fantastic too, with Pelé the undoubted star of the show.
Aged 29, at his professional peak and determined to wipe out the memories of the team's ignominious exit from the 1966 tournament in England at the group stages, Pelé in 1970 delivered so many iconic moments during the competition, two towering headers, one bringing about England goalkeeper Gordon Banks' fantastic reflex save, the other beating another goalkeeping great Dino Zoff at his near post in the actual final, his killer passes to Jairzinho and Carlos Alberto to score memorable goals in the same two games, the attempt from half-way against Czechoslovakia, the return volley and runaround-dummy both against Uruguay. All these done by the one player, in the top competition, in successive games.
Okay, so I'm satisfied that he was a truly great, if not the greatest ever player but the film goes a little deeper into the man's personal life and there I'd have to say the jury is still out. He candidly admits he never loved his wife before this narrative promptly disappears from view and then more pertinently and slightly more stringently, he's questioned about his passive some would say open-armed acceptance of the dictatorship which overturned democracy in Brazil from 1968 - 1985. We see him cosying up to the junta's president and retrospectively attempting rather unconvincingly to play the "sports and politics don't mix" card to absolve himself from any complicity with the harsh crackdowns perpetrated on his fellow countrymen and women by the military. It's quite an eye-opener to see one of his fellow-teammates of the time, Paulo Cesar lambast his footballing idol for his human failings. Pelé tries disingenuously to claim that he did more for his people as a sportsman than many politicians ever did, but of course he's side-stepping the issue. I accept he was in a tricky position but a bigger and braver man could and maybe should have said or done something rather than just kow-tow to the authorities in photo-ops with the pres. In the film he's thus compared unfavourably to Ali, who of course defied the American courts and risked his career in the process.
In the end, I left this film a greater admirer of Pelé the footballer but a somewhat lesser one of him as a man. As brave as a lion on the pitch, what a shame he was as meek as a mouse off it.
The film concentrates on his international career and particularly his exploits at the World Cups of 1958, 1962, 1966 and of course his climactic final appearance at the 1970 tournament held in Mexico. This is the first World Cup I personally remember watching as a boy. The matches were played in fantastic-looking stadia, there were great teams competing with great players - besides Brazil's all-stars, there were strong representatives from Europe, like England, the holders, Italy and Germany (or West Germany as they were then) and from South America Peru and Uruguay. My parents had just got our first ever colour television and the teams in their classic strips positively glowed out from the small screen into our living room. The football was fantastic too, with Pelé the undoubted star of the show.
Aged 29, at his professional peak and determined to wipe out the memories of the team's ignominious exit from the 1966 tournament in England at the group stages, Pelé in 1970 delivered so many iconic moments during the competition, two towering headers, one bringing about England goalkeeper Gordon Banks' fantastic reflex save, the other beating another goalkeeping great Dino Zoff at his near post in the actual final, his killer passes to Jairzinho and Carlos Alberto to score memorable goals in the same two games, the attempt from half-way against Czechoslovakia, the return volley and runaround-dummy both against Uruguay. All these done by the one player, in the top competition, in successive games.
Okay, so I'm satisfied that he was a truly great, if not the greatest ever player but the film goes a little deeper into the man's personal life and there I'd have to say the jury is still out. He candidly admits he never loved his wife before this narrative promptly disappears from view and then more pertinently and slightly more stringently, he's questioned about his passive some would say open-armed acceptance of the dictatorship which overturned democracy in Brazil from 1968 - 1985. We see him cosying up to the junta's president and retrospectively attempting rather unconvincingly to play the "sports and politics don't mix" card to absolve himself from any complicity with the harsh crackdowns perpetrated on his fellow countrymen and women by the military. It's quite an eye-opener to see one of his fellow-teammates of the time, Paulo Cesar lambast his footballing idol for his human failings. Pelé tries disingenuously to claim that he did more for his people as a sportsman than many politicians ever did, but of course he's side-stepping the issue. I accept he was in a tricky position but a bigger and braver man could and maybe should have said or done something rather than just kow-tow to the authorities in photo-ops with the pres. In the film he's thus compared unfavourably to Ali, who of course defied the American courts and risked his career in the process.
In the end, I left this film a greater admirer of Pelé the footballer but a somewhat lesser one of him as a man. As brave as a lion on the pitch, what a shame he was as meek as a mouse off it.
The title should be Pelé at the world cup. The doc not even try to go deeper to show who really is Pelé, or even try to tell us something different about him. Maybe it is okay, but it would be a lot better to know a little bit about Edson Arantes.
It could explore more about his carrier on brazilians teams and also how he started so young (17 he was playing the world cup), and what he did after soccer.
The idea of showing the dictatorship in Brazil was not bad, also how politcs influences even in soccer and it was a tough momment.
He is supposed to be the GOAT, however the doc do not show us this. There is no interview from others selecitons os players talking about how difficult is to play against him, or even how he was above the other players.
After watching it, i just feel that he was a really good player that won a lot of worldcups and that's it. Nothing more.
It could explore more about his carrier on brazilians teams and also how he started so young (17 he was playing the world cup), and what he did after soccer.
The idea of showing the dictatorship in Brazil was not bad, also how politcs influences even in soccer and it was a tough momment.
He is supposed to be the GOAT, however the doc do not show us this. There is no interview from others selecitons os players talking about how difficult is to play against him, or even how he was above the other players.
After watching it, i just feel that he was a really good player that won a lot of worldcups and that's it. Nothing more.
Good movie but not of the magnitude of what pelé meant for football or to the Brazilian people. Pelé was our idol, he made us love the game, turning us into the country of football. He brought the "jogo bonito"(which I think the documentary did wrong on not giving it the deserved importance) the style the brazilian national team played in the sixties that charmed the world and influences our style of play untill today.
The choice to bring the dictatorship period in brazil was very good to bring the context of what the people here were going through. Although it could've come out more connected with the storyline and to how Brazilians saw pelé as a hero who could bring joy during those rough times and how he could even unite the people for celebration of football.
The choice to bring the dictatorship period in brazil was very good to bring the context of what the people here were going through. Although it could've come out more connected with the storyline and to how Brazilians saw pelé as a hero who could bring joy during those rough times and how he could even unite the people for celebration of football.
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Written and performed by Tim Maia
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