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IMDbPro

The Firm

  • 2009
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
6.8K
YOUR RATING
The Firm (2009)
The film centers on Dom, a young wannabe football casual, who get drawn into the charismatic but dangerous world of the firm’s top boy, Bex. Accepted for the fast mouth and sense of humor, Dom soon becomes one of the boys. But as Bex and his gang clash with rival firms across the country and the violence spirals out of control, Dom realizes he wants out – until he learns it’s not that easy to simply walk away.
Play trailer0:48
1 Video
21 Photos
Coming-of-AgeLegal DramaComedyDramaMysteryThriller

Football hooligans organize themselves into firms that represent their favorite team.Football hooligans organize themselves into firms that represent their favorite team.Football hooligans organize themselves into firms that represent their favorite team.

  • Director
    • Nick Love
  • Writers
    • Al Ashton
    • Nick Love
  • Stars
    • Paul Anderson
    • Calum MacNab
    • Daniel Mays
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    6.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nick Love
    • Writers
      • Al Ashton
      • Nick Love
    • Stars
      • Paul Anderson
      • Calum MacNab
      • Daniel Mays
    • 25User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Firm
    Trailer 0:48
    The Firm

    Photos21

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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Paul Anderson
    Paul Anderson
    • Bex
    Calum MacNab
    Calum MacNab
    • Dom
    Daniel Mays
    Daniel Mays
    • Yeti
    Doug Allen
    Doug Allen
    • Trigger
    Joe Jackson
    • Jay
    Richie Campbell
    Richie Campbell
    • Snowy
    James Kelly
    • Beef
    Jaf Ibrahim
    • Usef
    Tommy Nash
    • Nunk
    Eddie Webber
    • Bob
    Camille Coduri
    Camille Coduri
    • Shel
    Billy Seymour
    Billy Seymour
    • Terry
    Joanne Matthews
    Joanne Matthews
    • Suzy
    Ebony Gilbert
    Ebony Gilbert
    • Justine
    Michael Davis
    • Johnny
    Joe Pizarro
    • Jamie
    Suzanna Day
    • Female Punter
    Jack Greenhough
    • Sammy
    • Director
      • Nick Love
    • Writers
      • Al Ashton
      • Nick Love
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    5.86.7K
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    Featured reviews

    5ESXTony

    A better 80's review than a football hoolie film

    After seeing some magazine articles about the film I was full of hope that this may be the best football hoolie film yet and certainly give a 'truer' representation of what life was like following football in the early eighties. Unfortunately, the reality is that it really carries no direction, you don't really find out anything about any of the characters and the lack of violence doesn't do the film any favours. Gary Oldman was a real 'psycho' in the original, Paul Anderson does a reasonable job but just wasn't menacing enough. The fight scenes were very poor, showing stand offs rather than actual fighting, that just wasn't what happened when two firms arranged a meet in the 80's. The music bought back a few memories and the best part of the film was the clothing, at least they got that right to a certain extent with Sergio, Fila, Ellesse and Pringle getting a good showing. Overall, it's a watchable film but it's not a great football film, not a lot of action and it isn't the best hooligan film to date, the original still takes that accolade. It's a shame but I don't think the original 'Firm' is likely to be beaten.
    6irusvirus

    A Solid Thriller, But Lacking Depth

    The film offers a glimpse into the world of hooligans, a world I personally can't comprehend. Why someone would find enjoyment in beating up rival fan groups remains a mystery to me, and unfortunately, the film doesn't provide any answers. Still, it's well-crafted and keeps the viewer engaged with its tight narrative structure.

    Despite the plot being entirely predictable and simple, the film manages to maintain suspense throughout its 1 hour and 30-minute runtime. There are no dull moments or instances where the pace falters. The film succeeds in delivering a gritty portrayal of its world, even if it doesn't delve deeply into the motivations behind it. For this solid entertainment, I give the film 6/10.
    6Theo Robertson

    Nostalgia Trip That Is Painfully Anachronistic And Cynical But Watchable

    Despite Nick Love being the most criticised film director working in Britain today his remake of THE SWEENEY has topped the UK film this week . Of course the fact that it's made a million quid at the box office is probably down to the title . If the film was called RAY WINSTIONE PLAYING HIMSELF SORTING OUT SOME NAUGHTY CRIMINALS it probably wouldn't have been such a success but hey there's nothing like a little cynicism if only to irritate and annoy the luvvie film critics who can't get enough poncy art house cinema. This film a remake of the highly regarded Alan Clarke drama from 1989 is a previous attempt to be cynical

    Clarke was along with Loach and Leigh the master of British realist cinema . Wisely Love decides not to follow this type of directing style . Instead he shoots a movie that has a wonderful rich look. The cinematography by the ironically named Matt Gray gives the impression that we're seeing an up and coming Roger Deakins in action and one wonders why Gray is confined to television . It's the cinematography that will be your abiding memory of this film

    The problem is that while you're watching the film and old enough to remember the 1980s you'll be forever scratching your head wondering what year it's set in . Characters walk around in shell suits which were once considered to be cool in about 1989 or 1990 . Likewise the hairstyles indicate that it's 1989-90 when the first film was set . But this illusion is contradicted by the musical soundtrack with artists likeSoft Cell , Tears For Fears and The Rock Steady Crew which gives the impression it's 1983 or 84 at the latest . Indeed there's a TV report that Leon Brittain is home secretary which means it's set in 1983-85 . As someone who was a teenager in this period let me tell you now there's no way anyone would have a shell suit or that type of hairstyle in the early to mid 1980s . These anachronistic aspects are totally distracting . This is a pity because it tends to ruin the first half of the movie . The second half does borrow heavily from the original teleplay but no doubt anyone who can remember the original will say the original was better and harder hitting

    This is a great shame because it's something of a brave decision by Love to retell the story from the point of view from Dom who was a relatively minor character from the 1989 FIRM . Cynics might say that's because there's no way someone of Love's reputation could get someone of the stature of an up and coming Gary Oldman to carry the film as the main character , can you imagine Danny Dyer as Bex ! . As it stands it's a much better looking and better made film than Love's 2007 effort OUTLAW and is fairly watchable
    johnmjg

    Far better to welcome the maturing of a talent.

    Nick Love's films are not about football violence, they are about men. They ask the question, how do boys become men in a world where the men around them are dysfunctional, often abused and abusive, or in the case of our public figures, corrupt? His films often use the back drop of the football tribe (gang), where it is understood, you can at once lose yourself and find an instant identity, but at what cost? The men in Nick Loves films are always flawed & struggling to find their place in a world that regards their attitude and energies as irrelevant, and as a result they are drawn, by the perceived excitement and glamour, into the bosom of the street gang.

    At the core of many of our social ills are dysfunctional men, failing themselves & us on a daily basis. This self hatred, often intensified by drink or drugs, is channelled back at society in many forms, often violent. Nick Love's films open up this world of male adversarial culture and expose it to the sun light. With an uncompromising swagger and flare, he addresses often distasteful issues that are very present, to a greater or lesser degree, all around us and many young men have to face on a daily basis. In fact one of the reasons Nick Loves films manage to gain finance, is that he is always aware of his audience and as a result has built a loyal following that feel understood by a British film maker.

    It is lazy not to understand the themes Nick Love is trying to explore, and too easy to join the band wagon of criticism, which in many ways mimics the criticism boys & men face through out their life, as their energies are misunderstood. Far better to welcome the maturing of a talent, and to support and celebrate a British film maker, who is still managing to use the canvas of film to explore themes that are universal, and as relevant today as they were in the 1980s.

    Nick Love however, is not Alan Clarke and his subjects, although similar, are very different. Alan Clarke's main thesis was political and his original film was written in a time that saw the working class being remodelled along Thatcherite principles. Clarke & Hunter perceived the football 'thugs' as an extension of the selfish yuppie, that became detached from the traditional community and was looking for a home and found football. While it cannot be denied that the political pressures and unrest of the Thatcher period were profound, and gave rise to a number of dispossessed subcultures, Nick Love's film operates in a world of the personal, not political. His film feels written from the inside out, not the other way round. Gone are the endless scenes debating the rights and wrongs of football violence, which felt heavy with the hand of the filmmaker, and in comes a confident understanding of the world of the story. Free from this pressure to explain the terms of the genre, Love's film becomes about belonging, about the excitement and rituals of the tribe. Whether thematically this is better or worse is one of personal preference, suffice to say, it would have been deeply misguided for Love to have attempted to voice Clarkes themes, which although potent, feel redundant from this point in history.

    One could argue that Clarke & Hunters original film failed to fully understand the subculture they used as their political vehicle. In one of the final scenes of the original 'Firm', a minor characters says to a documentary crew,''..its not about the football, we would organize around darts if we could'' .. this has been shown through study to be incorrect. No other sport has thrown up such a subculture as 'Football Hooligans'. It is tribal and deeply rooted, as in the case of Milwall & West Ham, in years and years of territorial and geographical rivalry. Football violence existed long before Clarke or Love, what happened in the 1980s, is it became highly organized, and as Love correctly identifies in his film, it became 'fashionable'. Nick Love's 'The Firm' understands this and in many ways is a truer representation of this phenomenon.

    There are a handful of British film makers working today, that are able to explore issues which go to the heart of our culture, within a global multiplex environment . Like it or loath it, Nick Love reaches out and provides a voice to a disaffected , often working class audience, and does this against enormous odds, not least, the middle class critical establishment.
    6reece-94254

    Haven't seen the original but all in all, this is a watchable movie

    So far, the film is a bit clichéd and over the top but there is a good deal of warmth and humour love brings to the film. Though I have not seen the original, nick love efforts should not go unnoticed as a director.

    Related interests

    Elsie Fisher in Dernière Année (2018)
    Coming-of-Age
    Tom Cruise, Demi Moore, and Kevin Pollak in Des hommes d'honneur (1992)
    Legal Drama
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Bex's estate agents is called Hunter Ashton & Clarke. Which is a nod to both the writer and the director of the 1989 original movie.
    • Goofs
      They boys are seen at various times going into JD Sports, the film is set in 1983, JD Sports didn't open a shop in London until 1989.
    • Quotes

      Bex: [Terry bumps into Bex on the dance floor] Whoa. Sorry mate.

      Terry: It's alright mate. Teach you to dance like a fucking melt though, won't it?

      Bex: Slow down. I'm just cutting a rug with me wife.

      Terry: [Terry looks at Bex' wife] What, that?

      Bex: No, you don't wanna make one with me mate. I'll fucking leave you behind.

    • Crazy credits
      Dedication listed in end credits: "This film is dedicated to Lordy."
    • Connections
      Featured in Angela and Friends: Episode #1.54 (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Tainted Love
      Written by Ed Cobb

      Performed by Soft Cell

      Published by Warner/ Chappell Music Limited

      Courtesy of Mercury Records Limited

      (c)1981

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 18, 2009 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Firma
    • Filming locations
      • Ferrier Estate, Kidbrooke, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Location HQ
      • Vertigo Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,094,777
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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