Will is a heartwarming adventure drama about a young orphan who sets out on a journey to pursue his passion for soccer. With the backdrop of the Champions League final in 2005, Will travels through Europe, facing challenges and meeting new friends along the way. This inspirational story highlights the power of determination and the importance of following one's dreams.
Antoine Peyralout is baker Mouillefarine's tricycle delivery man. Comical and stuttering, Antoine shows more interest in the local soccer team than in professional integrity. A wedding cake pays the price for it and the young man is dismissed. Not dispirited in the least, Antoine decides to go to Nice, where his favorite team will play the final of the Cup. On his merry (and eventful) way, he has the opportunity to save a pretty camper, Popeline, with whom he falls in love. Once in Nice, he discovers that Dabek, the brilliant goal-keeper is not up to his task following bad news...
The Ringmaster is a sadistic psychopath who runs a dark web entertainment show. He kidnaps innocent people and locks them in a basement where he subjects them to brutal and sadistic torture. The victims are beaten, mutilated, and killed one by one, as the Ringmaster revels in their pain and suffering. As the body count rises, a group of survivors must find a way to escape the twisted nightmare they have been trapped in.
Film celebrating the legendary footballer Denis Law, looking back at his upbringing and his fruitful career with Manchester United, where he earned the title The King.
"Forza Bastia" is a 26-minute film documenting a UEFA Cup match between PSV Eindhoven and French club SC Bastia at the Furiani Stadium in 1978. Jacques Tati directed the piece at the request of friend Gilberto Trigano – the President of the Bastia club at that time. It was subsequently shelved and kept in storage until Tati's daughter Sophie Tatischeff eventually assembled the footage for release in 2002.
A film about the Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal winning Cologne football team from 1977/1978.
1966 was both the first and only time England hosted - and won - the football World Cup. 30th July was the day of the final, and exactly 50 years to that day later, those people who were there reminisce.
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