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Suggestions of similar film to G'olé!
There are 68 films with the same actors, 8969 with the same cinematographic genres, 4182 films with the same themes (including 58 films with the same 3 themes than
G'olé!), to have finally
70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked
G'olé!, you will probably like those similar films :
Directed by Stefan ValdobrevGenres DocumentaryThemes Sports films,
Documentary films about sports,
Association football filmsRating71%
Martin Levidzhov's journey to becoming Mr Manchester United begins back in 1999 when he was watching the Champions League final between Manchester United and Bayern Munich. In the 89th minute of the match he vowed to change his name to Manchester United if his favourite team managed to turn around the 0:1 negative score. The British team did it in the most dramatic of fashions, thus determining Levidzhov's future struggles for the next fifteen years. The protagonist then undertook his fight with the Bulgarian legal system to have his name changed, a right he was repeatedly denied by various court instances. , 1h37
Origin United-kingdomGenres DocumentaryThemes Sports films,
Documentary films about sports,
Association football filmsRating63%
The film follows Manchester City in the wake of the club's takeover by Sheikh Mansour through the 2009-2010 season, capturing their emotions in victory and defeat. Whilst the documentary will also give an "access all areas" view into Manchester City Football Club including footage from the dressing room, boardroom and players' homes such as Carlos Tevez with exclusive in-depth interviews from chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak and manager Roberto Mancini., 1h37
Origin United-kingdomGenres DocumentaryThemes Sports films,
Documentary films about sports,
Association football filmsActors Gary Oldman,
Elliot FrancisRating68%
The film revisits the iconic footballing footage: Paul Gascoigne's tears, Gary Lineker's goals, David Platt's volley against Belgium, Lineker mouthing to the touchline after Gascoigne's yellow card against West Germany, Bobby Robson's rueful smile and consoling Gascoigne with the words, "You've got your life ahead of you. This is your first." As well as English football hooligans, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher backing a proposal to stop England going to Italy, Tory Sports minister Colin Moynihan encouraging the Italian police to be extremely firm with England's supporters, the tabloid press hounding of Sir Bobby and Chris Waddle's calamitous penalty shoot-out kick. It weaves rare, unseen footage with a Gary Oldman-voiced narrative and a soundtrack with early nineties music.