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Yesterday's Hero

  • 1979
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35min
NOTE IMDb
5,1/10
276
MA NOTE
Suzanne Somers and Ian McShane in Yesterday's Hero (1979)
Yesterday's Hero: Let's Forget About Football
Lire clip2:23
Regarder Yesterday's Hero: Let's Forget About Football
1 Video
14 photos
DrameMusique

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA has-been, alcoholic former soccer star determines to make a comeback. He gets help from his former girlfriend, now a rock star, and her partner.A has-been, alcoholic former soccer star determines to make a comeback. He gets help from his former girlfriend, now a rock star, and her partner.A has-been, alcoholic former soccer star determines to make a comeback. He gets help from his former girlfriend, now a rock star, and her partner.

  • Réalisation
    • Neil Leifer
  • Scénario
    • Jackie Collins
  • Casting principal
    • Suzanne Somers
    • Ian McShane
    • Adam Faith
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,1/10
    276
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Neil Leifer
    • Scénario
      • Jackie Collins
    • Casting principal
      • Suzanne Somers
      • Ian McShane
      • Adam Faith
    • 16avis d'utilisateurs
    • 2avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Yesterday's Hero: Let's Forget About Football
    Clip 2:23
    Yesterday's Hero: Let's Forget About Football

    Photos14

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux52

    Modifier
    Suzanne Somers
    Suzanne Somers
    • Cloudy
    Ian McShane
    Ian McShane
    • Rod Turner
    Adam Faith
    Adam Faith
    • Jake
    Paul Nicholas
    Paul Nicholas
    • Clint
    Sam Kydd
    Sam Kydd
    • Sam Turner
    Trevor Thomas
    • Speed
    Glynis Barber
    Glynis Barber
    • Susan
    Sandy Ratcliff
    Sandy Ratcliff
    • Rita
    • (as Sandy Ratcliffe)
    Alan Lake
    • Georgie Moore
    Paul J. Medford
    • Marek
    • (as Paul Medford)
    Matthew Long
    Matthew Long
    • Mac Gill
    Paul Desbois
    • Butch
    Eric Deacon
    Eric Deacon
    • Chris
    John Motson
    John Motson
    • TV Interviewer & Commentator
    Mark Wood
    • Small Boy
    Astley Jones
    • Newscaster
    Rex Wei
    • Waiter
    Chris Gannon
    Chris Gannon
    • Newsvendor
    • Réalisation
      • Neil Leifer
    • Scénario
      • Jackie Collins
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs16

    5,1276
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    Avis à la une

    6gavcrimson

    Yesterday'sHero

    A prime piece of late 1970s' fluff starring Ian McShane as a (sort of) George Best character and Paul Nicholas as a wealthy pop star who has bought into a football club (I'm guessing this part of the film was inspired by Elton John's involvement with Watford FC). Written by renown football expert Jackie Collins, and also starring Suzanne Somers as Cloudy, the type of female character name you could only get in a film written by Jackie Collins ...with Alan Lake in all his medallion man glory, who appears to have done more lines offscreen than he gets onscreen.

    Whereas most movies with Jackie Collins' name attached to them were ubiquitous during the VHS era (especially 'The Stud' and 'The Bi*ch') this one mysteriously never made it to video in the UK, but has been dusted off a few times recently by Talking Pictures TV.
    5PCC0921

    When Disco and Soccer Collide

    A famous singer (Suzanne Somers), and an aging pro soccer player (Ian McShane), who hooked-up years before, find themselves crossing paths again, in England, in this drama, that has a hard time getting started, but ends up being good enough, for an "E For Effort". Somers gets top billing in Yesterday's Hero (1979). Somers' Cloudy Martin, is one-half of a pop-music duo, known as Martin and Simon (Paul Nicholas). In the real world, I guess, they are like the Captain and Tennille, type-of, late-1970s pop music. The soundtrack is very disco driven. The way their performances are presented in the film, look very much like performances from television hits like, the Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour (1971-1974) and Donny and Marie (1976-1979). The music in Yesterday's Hero (1979), is pretty bad. Suzanne isn't a convincing singer, however it definitely sounds like her. It's not dubbed.

    Yesterday's Hero (1979), is a British production, that was distributed by Columbia Pictures. The low budget used for the film, which is obviously visible in this production, unintentionally, but positively, gives the film some realism and a grittiness, that produces a fairly cool, 1970s-style to it. Unfortunately, I could only find a VHS, 4:3 version of the film, which also looked squeezed. I am hoping, the day I stumble across Yesterday's Hero (1979) again, next time, hopefully, I can watch a new HD version of it. It may improve the grade, that I gave the film. The muddy VHS quality was a rough watch. This film feels like a hallmark, lifetime type of movie, but it was released before cable networks were a thing. Even though it has a PG rating, there is an evident TV-movie effect going on. The film was directed by Neil Leifer.

    Yesterday's Hero (1979), is a mix of staged singing sequences, interwoven between a soccer practice or game. Ian McShane plays Rod Turner, who among, the other things I mentioned, is also a drunk. It's good that he runs into Cloudy and Simon, because they decide to help Rod, make a comeback in pro soccer. The TV-movie aura felt in the film, is reenforced by acting lines, that felt like they were written for TV and not written, for a theatrical film. This was an era when they still said, "let's make love", on television, instead of "let's have sex". Yesterday's Hero (1979), is kind of lame, but it still deserves an E for Effort. The plot begins to feel like, its coming out of control and it has an abrupt ending. I'm talking quick. There are some funny moments, like seeing Ian McShane load 15 kids into a 1970s, European station wagon, which looks like a tank, because he teaches soccer to kids, but transportation was somewhat cheap. In the final credits it says, Suzanne Somers' wardrobe - from her closet.

    PMTM Grade: E+ (5.2) = 5 IMDB.
    4torrascotia

    My God...the music...

    This is one of those upbeat 70s movies about an alcoholic football player who's career is on the skids, but for some unfathomable reason he is given a second bite of the cherry.

    This has to be one of the least known UK football movies and based on my viewing it's easy to see why. Simply put there is more disco than football. And I mean there's a lot of it. And it's not even good disco, it's very bad disco. It's the worst kind of disco imaginable. The reason there is so much bad music is that the owner of the team just happens to be a singer. So we have to endure disco when he sings.....but also during any of the football scenes. So it's a double disco endurance test.

    The cast are basically a who's who of every bad male 1970s UK TV actor around. They look so out of place in a movie. Even McShane seems disinterested.

    Fans of football movies look away, it may serve as a snapshot of the worst UK fashion and music scenes of the 70s, but that's basically it.

    Maybe because it was written by a famous female author much of the so called action is centred around the protagonists love life, but even that aspect is pretty flat.

    Maybe watch it to say you have seen it but you have been warned, it's a bit like being stuck at a wedding dance and the DJ only has obscure disco tracks he enjoys but nobody else does, and every now and then you have to listen to an old drunk tell you about how they could have been a great footballer. Head for the exit!
    7MrsAlSwearengen

    Soccer ROCKY

    YESTERDAY'S HERO is a slightly schizophrenic film; there is the engaging plot concerning the washed-up, boozy ex-professional footballer played by Ian McShane, and the "pop stars" plot concerning Adam Faith and THREE'S COMPANY's Suzanne Somers.

    Both Faith and Somers are adequate actors, but their awful pop music performances are laughable and interminable. Somers must have had some influence in the production, as no sane filmmaker would have featured her endless, insipid stage performances which fill so much screen time. Somers prances and twists around embarrassingly while singing stupid songs, and Faith does his usual ho-hum pretty boy stuff. Fast-forward through their songs unless you are die-hard fans, and you will actually have a nice little character study which is fit for more than one viewing.

    McShane portrays the soccer player character with his usual capable aplomb, giving the character a dark pathos and haggard appeal. A film made today, especially in the US, would have cast someone fit and beautiful in the role. It is satisfying to see McShane's scrawny build and tired, convincingly hung-over face in the role, as he truly seems to inhabit the character in the film.

    Trivia for McShane fans: Ian McShane's father, Harry, played for Manchester United and other professional teams during the 1950's and 60's. Ian flirted with becoming a soccer player as a youngster but today his fans are happy he wasn't good enough to make the grade.
    4wilvram

    Yesterday's football

    One of those films so utterly banal and predictable as to be almost enjoyable on that account alone, the soccer world of Yesterday's Hero seems now nearly as distant as that of the superior Arsenal Stadium Mystery of forty years earlier. A time when virtually all weekend games kicked off at 15.00 on a Saturday, muddy pitches on some grounds from early winter on, teams rather than 'squads' and when you could pronounce all the players' names. A wealthy owner signing a player over the head of the manager would also look absurd back then, but now seems commonplace, so in that regard the film is prescient.

    Not a big fan of Ian McShane but he's excellent here, giving the only really convincing performance and blends in well with the footage from the Forest/Southampton League cup final. (To me he has a passing resemblance to the superb England goalkeeper of the era, Peter Shilton.) Neither Adam Faith nor Paul Nicholas were great actors to say the least, the latter also turning up in another Jackie Collins' epic The World Is Full Of Married Men, released shortly prior to this. So for fans of Ms Collins and Mr Nicholas, 1979 was their year.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Footage from the 1979 League Cup Final between Southampton and Nottingham Forest was used. Also filmed at Ipswich Town 31:03/1979 when Ipswich were playing Manchester City in Division 1
    • Gaffes
      To correspond with the footage used from the 1979 League Cup final, the Saints players wore replica Southampton kits, featuring yellow shirts and blue shirts. However, not all the players featured in the fictional Saints side had the same strip. While some had the correct kit, featuring a blue band running down the sleeves with yellow Admiral logos, other players wore a shirt that had plain sleeves. Furthermore, a couple of players, including Ian McShane's character, had the wrong typeface for their numbers on the back of the shirts. Admiral had a distinctive font at the time, but a couple of players have plain numbers more familiar with Umbro shirts of the period.
    • Citations

      Rod Turner: You fucking do it

    • Crédits fous
      Suzanne Somers' Wardrobe from her own closet.
    • Bandes originales
      Yesterday's Hero
      (uncredited)

      Written by Dominic Bugatti (uncredited) and Frank Musker

      Performed by Paul Nicholas

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    FAQ

    • How long is Yesterday's Hero?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 novembre 1979 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Герой завтрашнего дня
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Wembley Stadium, Wembley, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(football sequences filmed at: - Wembley Stadium)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Packer Organisation
      • Cinema Seven Productions Ltd.
      • Elliott Kastner Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 35 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono

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