Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Copa 71 review: An enlightening documentary about REAL girl power, writes BRIAN VINER !

Copa 71 review: An enlightening documentary about REAL girl power, writes BRIAN VINER

Time:2024-05-21 20:50:20 source:World Wrap news portal

Rating:

Copa 71 (PG, 90 mins)

Rating:

Irish Wish (93 mins)

Even in my many years as a sports writer, I never knew there was a women's football World Cup in 1971, with more than 100,000 people crammed into Mexico City's Azteca Stadium to watch the final between Mexico and Denmark, a year after the infinitely more celebrated men's final between Brazil and Italy in the same arena.

But there's no shame in that, because not many did. Outrageously, it has been all but expunged from the history books, and for years afterwards the players were bullied — by the game's governing body, FIFA, as well as their countries' football associations and even their own menfolk — into not talking about it.

A terrific documentary (executive-produced by Venus and Serena Williams), Copa 71  sets the record straight with tournament footage that was suppressed for half a century, plus a series of interviews with those who took part. They include the woman said to be the world's best female player, Italy's Elena Schiavo, still angry at the distinctly iffy refereeing decisions that favoured Mexico in the semi-final.

But more interesting, and painful, is all the evidence of misogyny — there's no other word for it — to which the women footballers of that era were subjected. The England captain Carol Wilson recalls a dinner at her home-town club, Newcastle United, at which the compere warmly invited her up to the stage as 'a star' in their midst, then proceeded to belittle and humiliate her.

Lis lene Nielsen with the trophy after the final match against Mexico in the Women's Football World Cup in Mexico 1971

Lis lene Nielsen with the trophy after the final match against Mexico in the Women's Football World Cup in Mexico 1971

Outrageously, the 1971 Women's World Cup has been all but expunged from the history books, and for years afterwards the players were bullied ¿ by the game¿s governing body, FIFA

Outrageously, the 1971 Women's World Cup has been all but expunged from the history books, and for years afterwards the players were bullied — by the game's governing body, FIFA

The film's co-director with Rachel Ramsay is James Erskine, whose documentary credits include 2013's Battle Of The Sexes about the tennis match between Billie-Jean King and Bobby Riggs, and whose feminist credentials are now complete.

Speaking of completion, if you get through to the end of Irish Wish, a poorly-scripted, dreadfully-acted, idiotically-plotted rom-com, then award yourself a four-leafed clover.

Lindsay Lohan plays an American book editor, in Ireland for the wedding of a best-selling author, whom she not-so secretly fancies. It's ghastly from start to finish, but there is some vague fun in counting the Emerald Isle cliches, which pile up like empty Guinness glasses in Scruffy Murphy's bar.

Copa 71 is in cinemas. Irish Wish is on Netflix.

Related information
  • Ship that caused Baltimore bridge collapse has been refloated
  • Illegal migrants cost the taxpayer £14 billion every year, says former minister Dame Andrea Jenkyns
  • What to know about the Penske scandal that has rocked IndyCar
  • Revealed: Ministers considered a Rwanda
  • Justin Timberlake set to bring his The Forget Tomorrow World Tour to Australia in 2025
  • How major US stock indexes fared Tuesday, 5/7/2024
  • Survivors of alleged abuse in Illinois youth detention facilities step forward
  • Disney's streaming business turns a profit in first financial report since challenge to Iger
Recommended content
  • Kosovo prepares a new draft law on renting prison cells to Denmark after the first proposal failed
  • Rishi Sunak admits he must prove to voters his plan is 'making a difference'
  • Woman, 31, was left 'burning from the inside out' in 17
  • REVEALED: New PROOF the anti
  • Six killed in a 'foiled coup' in Congo, the army says
  • Met Gala 2024: Doja Cat boldly dons massive wet T