PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,4/10
3,6 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El chico malo del fútbol francés: arrogante, impertinente, incomprendido, goleador, incalificable, genio, rebelde. A pesar de llevar jugando casi 20 años al más alto nivel, Nicolas Anelka si... Leer todoEl chico malo del fútbol francés: arrogante, impertinente, incomprendido, goleador, incalificable, genio, rebelde. A pesar de llevar jugando casi 20 años al más alto nivel, Nicolas Anelka sigue siendo difícil de definir.El chico malo del fútbol francés: arrogante, impertinente, incomprendido, goleador, incalificable, genio, rebelde. A pesar de llevar jugando casi 20 años al más alto nivel, Nicolas Anelka sigue siendo difícil de definir.
Roman Abramovich
- Self
- (metraje de archivo)
Roselyne Bachelot
- Self
- (metraje de archivo)
Roberto Carlos
- Self
- (metraje de archivo)
Steve Clark
- Self
- (metraje de archivo)
- (as Steve Clarke)
Reseñas destacadas
The documentary tries to rehabilitate Nicolas Anelka by explaining successively: that he is a good father, that the ten or so tangles with his coaches are never his fault, that he does not have the appetite for profit despite his entourage who put pressure on the 15 clubs he went through. In the end, the documentary does not do good to his image, sporting and humanely. To convince you (spoiler) watch how he addresses his son who has just returned from soccer training, humiliating him.
In short: a biased documentary that is counterproductive if you want to save Anelka's image. Definitely a great player, sadly not a team player with stable mentality.
This reminds me of The Last Dance with Michael Jordan, while Jordan did achieve a lot of things. Anelka's greatest achievement will be his ability to create noises around him.
In short: a biased documentary that is counterproductive if you want to save Anelka's image. Definitely a great player, sadly not a team player with stable mentality.
This reminds me of The Last Dance with Michael Jordan, while Jordan did achieve a lot of things. Anelka's greatest achievement will be his ability to create noises around him.
I'm not a big documentary fan as they are normally a bit boring.
But this is certainly an exception for me.
It reminds you that you have 1 life & if people disrespect you there is no need to stand for it.
I forgot about the massive change & benefit Anelka's actions made for young French footballers.
I appreciate during the documentary he "appears honest", not afraid to point out his own mistakes, behaviours & consequences of his actions.
Top player who has earned more of my respect
I never followed Nicolas Anelka's career with a lot of attention, but he's the kind of player who was always on your radar if you cared about football during the 2000s. His reluctance to be a superstar is supposed to explain the drama he brought wherever he played, but a documentary that sides so definitively with its subject is bound to feel unsatisfying in the end.
The first half of the movie is a well structured presentation/self-portrait of Anelka the player and Anelka the man, a complicated character who can, indeed, be easily judged as flippant and arrogant. The second half becomes mired in director Eric Hannezo's efforts to stick to his "misunderstood" subtitle, at the cost of sacrificing the documentary's chronology. That's why more controversial events of Anelka's career are brought forward, time spent at various clubs is conspicuously compressed or wholly ignored, and the story concludes on France's scandalous 2010 representation at the World Cup, with Anelka in the limelight.
In many ways, it feels like Anelka is a version of Ibrahimovic that was disliked. The documentary offers little insight as to why that might be, beyond pointing fingers at the media and managers, with some of the better insights coming from former Arsenal honcho, Arsene Wenger. So while there are definitely interesting facets to Hannezo's docu, the numerous exculpations make for a less than engaging watch, leaving too much unsaid - or unasked.
The first half of the movie is a well structured presentation/self-portrait of Anelka the player and Anelka the man, a complicated character who can, indeed, be easily judged as flippant and arrogant. The second half becomes mired in director Eric Hannezo's efforts to stick to his "misunderstood" subtitle, at the cost of sacrificing the documentary's chronology. That's why more controversial events of Anelka's career are brought forward, time spent at various clubs is conspicuously compressed or wholly ignored, and the story concludes on France's scandalous 2010 representation at the World Cup, with Anelka in the limelight.
In many ways, it feels like Anelka is a version of Ibrahimovic that was disliked. The documentary offers little insight as to why that might be, beyond pointing fingers at the media and managers, with some of the better insights coming from former Arsenal honcho, Arsene Wenger. So while there are definitely interesting facets to Hannezo's docu, the numerous exculpations make for a less than engaging watch, leaving too much unsaid - or unasked.
It was very watchable. But i found the voice overs / narrations very off putting. I understand even though most people could speak English fluently they chose to skeak in their native tongue, no problem. But why not have their voices narrated in english by French voice actors with french accents.
A great behind the scenes story of a truly misunderstood footballer. His talents were never fully appreciated, including by myself. I forgot how great he acually was and this film did a great job reminding me of it. Misunderstood shows Anelka's journey through numerous clubs and how he lives up to the title of being misunderstood by being perceived as being selfish and arrogant where that wasn't really the case. A great watch for any football lover!!
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By what name was Anelka el incomprendido (2020) officially released in India in Hindi?
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