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Le match de leur vie

Original title: The Game of Their Lives
  • 2005
  • PG
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
3.6K
YOUR RATING
Le match de leur vie (2005)
CT #1, Post
Play trailer0:37
2 Videos
47 Photos
SoccerDramaHistorySport

Based on a true story, this film tells the tale of the 1950 U.S. soccer team, who, against all odds, beat England 1 - 0 in the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Although no U.S. team has ever ... Read allBased on a true story, this film tells the tale of the 1950 U.S. soccer team, who, against all odds, beat England 1 - 0 in the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Although no U.S. team has ever won a World Cup title, this story is about the family traditions and passions which shaped... Read allBased on a true story, this film tells the tale of the 1950 U.S. soccer team, who, against all odds, beat England 1 - 0 in the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Although no U.S. team has ever won a World Cup title, this story is about the family traditions and passions which shaped the lives of the players who made up this team of underdogs.

  • Director
    • David Anspaugh
  • Writers
    • Geoffrey Douglas
    • Angelo Pizzo
  • Stars
    • Wes Bentley
    • Gerard Butler
    • Gavin Rossdale
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    3.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Anspaugh
    • Writers
      • Geoffrey Douglas
      • Angelo Pizzo
    • Stars
      • Wes Bentley
      • Gerard Butler
      • Gavin Rossdale
    • 47User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    The Miracle Match
    Trailer 0:37
    The Miracle Match
    The Miracle Match
    Trailer 2:23
    The Miracle Match
    The Miracle Match
    Trailer 2:23
    The Miracle Match

    Photos46

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    Top cast78

    Edit
    Wes Bentley
    Wes Bentley
    • Walter Bahr
    Gerard Butler
    Gerard Butler
    • Frank Borghi
    Gavin Rossdale
    Gavin Rossdale
    • Stanley Mortensen
    Jay Rodan
    Jay Rodan
    • Frank 'Pee Wee' Wallace
    Costas Mandylor
    Costas Mandylor
    • Charlie 'Gloves' Columbo
    Louis Mandylor
    Louis Mandylor
    • Gino Pariani
    Zachery Ty Bryan
    Zachery Ty Bryan
    • Harry Keough
    • (as Zachery Bryan)
    Jimmy Jean-Louis
    Jimmy Jean-Louis
    • Joe Gaetjens
    Richard Jenik
    Richard Jenik
    • Joe Maca
    Nelson Vargas
    • John 'Clarkie' Souza
    Craig Hawksley
    • Walter Giesler
    Bill Smitrovich
    Bill Smitrovich
    • Admiral Higgins
    Patrick Stewart
    Patrick Stewart
    • Older Dent McSkimming
    Terry Kinney
    Terry Kinney
    • Dent McSkimming
    John Rhys-Davies
    John Rhys-Davies
    • Bill Jeffrey
    • (as John Rhys Davies)
    Maria Bertrand
    Maria Bertrand
    • Rosemary Borghi
    Marilyn Dodds Frank
    • Fara Borghi
    Thomas Charles Simmons
    • Joe Calcaterra
    • (as Thomas C. Simmons)
    • Director
      • David Anspaugh
    • Writers
      • Geoffrey Douglas
      • Angelo Pizzo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.13.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8JenUF

    A Victory for Game of Their Lives

    First and foremost, I'm hardly a soccer expert and barely a soccer fan so this commentary comes strictly from a movie fan and a fan who enjoys critiquing films. That said, I found The Game of Their Lives to be a solid film. It's a product of the same mind that brought us "Rudy" and "Hoosiers" and one can expect similar results. It tells the tale of the 1950 US World Cup team that shockingly beat England (though did not win the World Cup itself) It begins in St Louis, providing backgrounds and insight into the lives and families of the St Louisians who later will be on the World Cup Team.

    Strong performances from Wes Bentley and Gerard Butler lead this film to the final victory. Bentley and Butler portray the leaders of the team (Walter Bahr and Frank Borghi, respectively) with likability and believability. The supporting cast that rounds out the team also turn out performances that will keep you involved with wanting to route for this team. Don't expect an electric atmosphere, however, as this story is told from a reporter reminiscing.

    The Game of Their Lives offers character development for the team members without ever straying from the subject at hand. Through their actions on and off the field, the audience can get a taste for who these men were. Much homage and respect is also deservingly paid to England for their magnificent history in the sport. This is not one of those ports films that serves to make the United States seem over glorious and under mind the greatness of England, as many assume it will. I for one walked away from this film with a greater respect for England and what they've done, and continue to do, for the sport
    8drl2916

    Enjoyed but one thing lacking

    I very much enjoyed this movie. The return in time to 1950 was well done & very realistic. The movie did a nice job of recreating one of the most forgotten episodes in USA sports history. There is one thing I would have liked to have seen and that would have been an 'epilogue' at the end of the film stating what these players did with the rest of their lives. This is what was done at the end of movies such as 'Chariots of Fire' and 'American Graffiti'. I do know that Walter Bahr ended up as the soccer coach at Penn State. I know that Harry Keough was the soccer coach at St. Louis U. when they won five NCAA titles. It would have been nice to see these kind of summaries about all of the featured players.
    9Ishallwearpurple

    Loved the look and feel of this film----

    "The Game Of Their Lives" lives up to expectations as a exciting underdog sports movie. I loved it. Saw it in a theater with only 3 other people - at noon, on a Monday, raining - but it didn't matter because I was engaged and wrapped up in the 1950's story of a bunch of ordinary guys who did something extraordinary.

    Based on a real event with real, still living, people it is about heros of WWII who came home and went about their lives until asked to form a team for the World Cup soccer matches. They have only weeks and decide to get some players from the east coast and some from one area of St. Louis, MO. from the Italian enclave known as The Hill.

    Frank Borghi (Gerard Butler) is the goalie and a leader of the group. The challenge is to get the whole group to pull together and mesh the different styles to make a team that may make a good showing. They don't expect to win as most of the teams they will play are more or less professionals and/or have played together for years.

    The soccer playing is exciting even for this old gal who knows little about the game. The cinematography is very good and keeps the pace of the game and shots of the crowds and sports announcers ticking along and by the end when time runs out on the English players, and the Americans have won this great upset, I was ready to cheer too.

    I disagree with most of the reviews I have read. This is a good sports movie and the performances and pacing are as good as "Rudy" or any other underdog film.

    One thing I loved was the look of the people and homes and cars. It was the 1950's again and the music I danced to was just right. One for my movie collection. 9/10
    9abby621

    Fun (Especially for St. Louisans)

    My soccer team and our coach (all St. Louis Public High people) decided to go see Game of Their Lives today, opening day. We went to the Chase, one of the three theaters in the area where the movie was playing. We were hyped no matter what - It was the weekend and we were a bunch of teenage girls going to go see a movie. None of us actually expected a great movie though. We were happily surprised though.

    The movie started off introducing the tale - the who, what, where, when, and whys of it all. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch journalist, Dent McSkimming, retells this information and relays us back to 1950. We are introduced to the St. Louis members of the team in a rather amusing manner, in which the team gathers from such venues as a funeral... They gather down at the Hill (where a good deal of the film was filmed), and play a game. For soccer fans, these scenes are really fun to watch, and wonder how the scenes must have been choreographed. It really is amazing.

    In addition to the St. Louis members, there are East Coasters who join the team. The team ends up being rather segregated between the two groups. The teams are brought together by the leaders from each side, Walter Bahr (the amazing Wes Bentley) and Frank Borghi (the equally amazing Gerard Butler). The two have a great on screen chemistry, especially when they go to recruit Joe Gatjaens (played by Jimmy Jean-Louis).

    The whole cast is amazing, but none more so than the three fore-mentioned actors who really truly seemed to become the soccer player they were portraying. It was a lot of fun to cheer with the rest of the theater every time Frank (Mr. Butler) stops the ball, or when Joe (Mr. Jean- Lewis) scores the game winning goal against the Brits. Jay Rodan is also particularly amusing as "Pee-Wee" Wallace. It's hard not to like the characters you're supposed to like (and equally as hard not to dislike the ones you're supposed to dislike, such as Gavin Rossdale as Stanley Mortensen).

    It was also fun to sit in a theater filled with people who were actually in the movie. The Chase was packed with extras who were eager to cheer out every time they were on screen. The man sitting next to our coach plays the barber in the very beginning of the film and told us to cheer for him when he came on. So of course we did. Then, as soon as his part was over, he stood up and said 'All right, that's it for me' and left. It was absolutely hilarious. The man in front of us had pictures of him and Gerard Butler at the Premier, which was held in St. Louis. This film has been something that has united St. Louisans, and anyone from the city should go see it. It is an amazing deal of fun to see the little car place across from Adrianna's (home of the best sandwich in the city) and the field up at Soldan High, or the Bocce field on the Hill. It shows the real St. Louis.

    All in all, this was an amazing movie that everyone should see, especially those from St. Louis and those who have ever played or watched soccer. It's a great story no matter what. And the film isn't too long either... So if you don't like it - well, you don't have to sit through it for too long (now that's what I call logic).

    9/10 stars (I just can't call it perfect... Awfully close though.)
    6hall895

    Great story, reasonably decent movie

    The story of the 1950 United States World Cup soccer team's stunning upset victory over England is one which has been begging to be told for years. One of the great sports underdog stories of all time and hardly anyone knows a thing about it. Many younger American soccer fans don't even know it happened. Finally, this movie has come along to shed some well-deserved light on those players who toiled mostly in anonymity and whose achievements seemed lost in the dustbin of history. It is wonderful that this movie was made. You just wish the movie had been made better. The Game of Their Lives or The Miracle Match or whatever they're calling it these days never quite hits the heights. It tells a story which needed to be told. It just doesn't tell it in an entertaining enough way.

    This movie is cut from the tried and true sports underdog movie mold (Hoosiers, Rocky, Rudy and so on) but it never has the same sense of energy which drove those films forward. While those films had a certain zest to them as they built towards a thrilling conclusion this film just kind of slogs along. It's not nearly as engrossing as it could have, and given the great story they had to work with, probably should have been. The fact that certain details of history have been twisted and changed to try to make things seem more dramatic than they actually were doesn't help either. A misguided attempt to create a "villain" on the English team also falls flat. It seems the filmmakers were afraid to allow this story to speak for itself and were determined to spice it up with some artificial drama. The fake drama doesn't work and we're not left with enough real drama either.

    This is not to say that The Game of Their Lives (or The Miracle Match or whatever) is a bad movie. It's OK. You just get the sense that this story deserved a movie which is better than just OK. The acting is fine with Gerard Butler and Wes Bentley the key figures in a cast which otherwise is made up of mostly unknowns with the exception of, oh sweet irony, Englishman Patrick Stewart as the American soccer reporter who serves as the film's narrator while relishing the memory of the English defeat. The visuals are very good and the soccer scenes quite well done. But what's lacking is drama. The film never really grabs you, from the "getting to know you" phase as we meet the players all the way through the "thrilling" climax which comes off as rather ordinary. And what the U.S. team achieved in Brazil in 1950 was anything but ordinary. Unfortunately the full impact of what those men accomplished and who those men really were doesn't come across in this film. And that's a shame.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to an interview he gave to the New York Times in 2010, this movie was made during the middle of Wes Bentley's decade-long, extremely serious addiction to cocaine and heroin. He said in that interview that he only accepted any movie roles during that time so that he would have money to buy enough drugs.
    • Goofs
      When the team arrives in Brazil, the game against England is constantly referred to as the team's opening game. However, in the 1950 World Cup the United States' first game was against Spain on June 25th. The game against England was played on June 29th and was the second game for the Americans.
    • Connections
      Referenced in My Big Break (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Monkey Pad
      Written by James O'Connell & Christopher S. Parker

      Performed by 'Beakertronic'

      Courtesy of Architune, LLC

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 26, 2005 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • IFC Films
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Game of Their Lives
    • Filming locations
      • St. Louis, Missouri, USA
    • Production companies
      • Independent Film Channel (IFC)
      • Bristol Bay Productions
      • Peter Newman Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $375,750
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $175,336
      • Apr 24, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $388,998
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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