The Club (1980) Poster

(1980)

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7/10
An Aussie cult classic
mighty_pickman15 April 2003
An Aussie cult classic. Although a fictional story it is set in a real VFL (now AFL) club, Collingwood, one of the biggest sporting clubs in Australia (as a Carlton man it hurts me to say that :)). Shot on location at Collingwood's home ground of Victoria Park it features real Magpie footballers of the era, including Rene Kink. All of game footage, with the exception of those featuring John Howard is actual game footage from VFL game of the time & featuring many Melbourne football identities including Lou Richards & Scotty Palmer.
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8/10
Of Aussie Rules and a Lost Age
royboy198311 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
David Williamson's The Club is a film that for many reasons has been forgotten by Australian audiences and this is a great shame as the cinematography of a Melbourne is worth viewing alone. Director Beresford provides viewers with a snap shot of a sport and a nation caught between the comfort of old practices and promises of a new generation. Within the mise en scene their are wonderful examples of a Melbourne burgeoning with classic architecture and suburban symbols such as the trains towards the city and the new defunct Victoria Park football ground.

The story is a timeless tale of sports and the mix of people who are drawn to it. Characters are transparent in their positioning, Jack Thompson and Harold Hopkins are the integral cogs that love the game and their club while administrators Frank Wilson and Alan Cassell are dastardly as the back room power-brokers. A young John Howard will surprise many as the athletic young Tasmanian recruit who must lead the team to victory and the hyper active pie factory owner to club president Graham Kennedy steals every scene he is in.

Finally to those who love AFL and especially those who loved 1980s football you will see many of the greats and some present day coaches especially Rodney Eade and Gary Ayres. The whole playing list of "The Club" are Collingwood's 1979 team so you will see many shots of players such as a young Peter Daicos and Peter Moore and many famous figures like Lou Richards and Scot Palmer.

The heart of the film is the clash between the old, determined practices of football and the new generation that is forcing the game and all involved to evolve. As a snapshot of Australia at the verge of the 1980s this film doesn't disappoint.
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8/10
Real action on the field brought to life by gifted playwright
PeterMitchell-506-56436411 February 2013
Again David Williamson has shone, and showed us how his plays become gem movies. If you're a footy player, you're gonna love this movie cause you'll relate with it. C'mon, let's face it, every footy player is expendable. What's happening here, is just buck passing. What I loved about Jack Thompson's character, the best player in this one, is he shoots straight from the hip. It's such an effective performance, you'd think he really was footballer. Frank Wilson and Graham Kennedy, (sorry, Kennedy, a slimy captain is the best performer here) are the representatives of this team, who signed on a new player, yes John Howard in his much thinner days, who'd rather watch a seagull, then kick a ball. Howard, the comic in this tale, too sees through this dirty game, where a score of good players are removed, so the club fights back. It's great when Howard pulls Wilson's chain, with a childhood story. The happy ending that will send hearts appeased, will make you howl with victory, it's message of fighting back, has never hit harder. Watch this for Kennedy's finest moment as the great actor and legendary icon he was.
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Not just for fans of Australian Rules Football
Zane-148 September 1999
I first saw "The Club" in high school as the play the film was based on was part of the English required reading list. I enjoyed the film but thought that with the Australian Rules Football setting, people unfamiliar with the sport would find many of the references obscure and dislike the film. Having seen "The Club" again recently, I realised that although somewhat dated, the film is as much about the wheeling and dealing that occurs off the field as it is about the action on the field. The action that takes place in the boardroom would be instantly familiar to fans of any sport and it's in these scenes the movie comes to life. Any producer wanting to remake "The Club" with the American market in mind needs only to replace the references to Australian Rules football with baseball or basketball and the script would be ready to go into production.

The Producers would also be wise to recast Jack Thompson as the coach as he gives a great understated performance that deserves an encore.

Certainly worth a viewing on a wintry evening.
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7/10
Hollywood ending...
mighty_red12 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I gave it a 7 because the dialogue and characters remain quite faithful to the play. The main problem with this interpretation is that it tries to fill in too many of the unnecessary gaps and continues where the play left off. The big finale, of the team winning the flag and Laurie presumably keeping his job is totally unnecessary and typically Hollywood.

This film is great viewing however in seeing a young John Howard as Geoff and the "originals", Harold Hopkins as Danny and Frank Wilson as Jock.

The way the film addresses the male ego and the imagery of 70's Melbourne is excellent. Yes, Melbourne is a horrible place in the outer suburbs, nice enough in the CBD though. But the passion of the people is captured in the crowd shots and in Laurie and Ted.
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6/10
An average movie for footy fanatics
jimcrotty-641097 June 2022
Now that it is over 40 years, the movie is quite dated. Some of the football action is not quite there, particularly the inserted action just looks plastic and out of place.
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9/10
Great mix of sport, comedy & boardroom politics
Sonatine9720 August 2000
A great little Aussie film that I would recommend to anyone interested in the above summary and should try and track down.

In spite of it being almost 20 years old it doesn't feel in anyway dated, except for the fashion & hair styles of course. But what we have is basically a struggling Aussie Rules football team, Collingwood (a real team by the way, filmed on location at their stadium), coping with boardroom power struggles & player mutinies while the under achieving coach tries to get the team to the championship finals by the end of the season.

Okay, so this kind of scenario has been done to death by a great many Hollywood movies but there's something rather special with this Aussie gem. The mixture of comedy & drama is just right, preventing the film from either drifting to one extreme (excessive political dogma) or to the other extreme of sheer lampoon & farce.

The much under-rated Jack Thompson plays Laurie, the coach of the Collingwood team, greatly admired by his players but despised by certain members of the board for his lack of team discipline & dearth of any trophies.

Thompson's true nemesis is Frank Wilson, as Jock. An old time footballer & coach, but is now part of the board with a host of trophies to his name. Yet gets bouts of jealousy as soon as anyone tries to usurp his achievements, and that's why he's got it in for Thomspon.

Jock also has it in for the Chairman of the club, Ted (Graham Kennedy), who although loves the club and has seen every single game since he was a kid, has little or no political experience with Collingwood and only got his position through clever negotiation. In essence his true job is nothing more than an owner of a meat pie factory.

If Jock can somehow create a scandal against Ted so that Ted has to resign, then he'll be able to become the new Chairman and complete his ambition with the club and sack those who he dislikes rightly or wrongly.

Snuggling alongside Jock is Gerry (Alan Cassell) as the club's chief administrator, who is cunning & spends most of his time playing off both Ted's & Laurie's weaknesses so that he can gain from a position of strength.

And that's just the conflict in the boardroom! There's still the problems on the pitch with the players going on strike every five minutes or the club's most expensive purchase spending all his time smoking dope and convincing himself he's too good for an average team like Collingwood.

All the main actors excel in their parts; there's no driftwood here. Bruce Beresford keeps everything nicely focused without having to complicate matters with too many sub-plots or excessive bouts of boardroom politics.

Although the ending is perhaps a little too predictable and even if you're not fully versed on the rules of Australian Rules Football, don't worry, just take it easy and watch the fun & froth.

highly recommended.

*****/*****
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7/10
Amusing take on the Aussie macho style and mores
mark-rojinsky18 February 2022
I saw this when I was a teenager in the '80s when it was aired by the Beeb. It is an amusing and droll take on the '70s Aussie macho style. Mustachioed fairhaired Jim Thompson is highly professional as the coach. The abundant sun and light of Australia are astonishing. It is a stablemate to 'Goodbye Pork-pie' (1981) the hilarious and adventurous New Zealand road-movie.
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10/10
Aussie Classic
puttingoutfires017 November 2005
This is simply a great Aussie film. Unfortunately, films are just not made this way anymore. Not only is it a great satire about a football club, which has probably not changed in 30 years, it is also a wonderful commentary on the commercialization of sport. Comparisons to sport and war are easy after seeing this film. Great performances from Jack Thompson, John Howard and Graham Kennedy as well as cameos from a few of Australia's footballing legends. Bruce Beresford's direction is superb, the theme song became legend and the film is one hilarious argument. It gets better every time you watch it and if you haven't seen it yet, you have to see it soon.
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7/10
You don`t need to like aussie rules but it helps.
nidge29 September 1999
A very good if not wholly accurate film about aussie rules football. The characters are in most cases larger than life but are on the whole believable. The backstabbing and wrangling is as you imagine it to be and the dislike of the board by the players is tangible. You will laugh and cry at the antics of the Magpie`s. Watch it, you won`t regret it.
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1/10
Watch a Grand Final replay where your side loses instead
gcd7011 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Woeful adaptation of David Williamson's sarcastic, ocker Australian play about a young Tasmanian lad who is recruited by a powerful Victorian Football League club for an unprecedented transfer fee, and then begins to send the club into turmoil with his bad attitude and shocking performances.

Everything is so awful in this movie it's funny. None of the real life footballers (Ronny Wearmouth, Peter Daicos, Ray Shaw and Rene Kink to name a few) can act, and the lead thesps don't do much better. David Williamson fails to translate any of the dry wit of his play to the big screen and there is nothing to look at for Aussie Rules fans either. Even repetitive bursts of Mike Brady's "Up There Cazaly" (which comprises the entire soundtrack) don't help, in fact it makes things all the more unbearable.

It's a complete mystery why a talent such as Bruce Beresford would ever get involved in a farce like this. Try watching a grand final replay in which your side loses, I guarantee you'll enjoy it more than watching "The Club".

Sunday, July 17, 1994 - Video
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9/10
Hayward? He's hopeless!
Marco_Trevisiol29 November 1999
Every time I watch this film I marvel at how well written and acted this film is. It is an excellent analysis of the manouvering and back-stabbing that goes on at a football club but avoids the pitfalls of being overly serious and is also very funny.

There are so many memorable characters one could mention but that the one that stands out for me is the character of Gerry, the club administrator. In every scene he's in, you see how, whenever he has something serious to say to someone, he uses terms like 'we' or 'the committee' - he never uses the term 'I' so that he slyly absolves himself of responsibility of any of the hard decisions that are made. As Laurie says, he is an oily weasel. Sadly, he's the type of person you would find on the AFL Commission these days.

Finally, to correct a previous reviewer, the song is 'Up there Cazaly', named after the footballer Roy Cazaly.
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5/10
Would have worked better as a stage play
maccas-5636712 July 2021
This might have been entertaining to watch on stage as a play, but not as a film. After a while I just got sick and tired of the constant yelling and over-acting. It was like they were all auditioning for a NIDA scholarship or something.

The Club certainly showcases some fantastic Australian actors, and they all get to show-off their chops here. Despite that, it wasn't always convincing and I found myself tuning out because the yelling just became white noise after a while.

The film accurately captures a particular era of Aussie Rules Football, and frankly, a great period in Australian culture itself. As a time capsule, the film works really well. Its use of dark humour was also effective at times, though didn't always land well.

It was nice seeing faces that have since passed and are sadly lacking in the Australian footy landscape these days. Not much footy here, so as to not alienate non-footy fans, but I just wasn't enjoying myself all that much by the end.

"The Merger" is a far superior Aussie Rules film.
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10/10
LEGLESS SISTER
rattlernb17 August 2018
Just love this flick it really only for a particular client ie: Australian mainly & especially if your involved with a footy club & was playing in & around this era still get goose bumps when i hear "there's a lot more to football than really meets the eye " up there cazaly a real cult movie & one i will never not wish to watch over an over again
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9/10
Australian Classic
Tak0059 August 2020
This film may lack the polish and production qualities of the Hollywood and British movies of the same time. But it came at a time when Australia was making good films about Australian subjects using Australians. The acting is good and the script is well written.
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It's much better than "Parker's Pie's!"
Dom-526 October 1999
The Club is without a doubt one of my all time favourite films. I hold this masterpiece in such high esteem that I have two copies of the video, one for lending people and one for my own enjoyment.

Non sports fans are often put off by films about sport (particularly a minority sport such as Aussie Rules – sorry convicts!) but to describe the club as a sports movie would be doing Davis Williamson's superb screenplay (based on his own play) a huge disservice. It has very few od the cleche sporting action sequences that hamper many films in the genre, and relies rather on the sharp dialogue and confrontations between the characters.

I honestly couldn't recommend The Club highly enough. The combination of great acting and, without doubt, the best collection of one liners in any movie, make The Club an absolute must for all.

Watch it and sing with me……..'Up there Gazalie……'
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5/10
Get stuffed.
bombersflyup15 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The Club is better than I thought it would be.

The dialogue's surprisingly good and at times humorous. Graham Kennedy's performance elevates what would otherwise be silly, into content of stature. It suffers when he's no longer the president. Conversely John Howard's performance is at the other end of the spectrum, giving us trash. The film centers on the boardroom, so there's a severe lack of football and on field discussion. The game footage it does have though, pretty woeful. However the endeavor and club spirit's there.
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8/10
Forget the sports theme - just a fantastic film full of great characters
colinmetcalfe21 January 2011
Warning: Spoilers
What can I say? A complete and utter gem of a film. Saw it many years ago on Channel 4 (in the eighties I think) and never forgot it. Bought it last week off Amazon watched it last night and it was every bit as good as I remembered it. How many past favourites can you say that about? When I get into conversations about favourite films or why all sports films are awful I mention this film and nobody has ever heard of it! Certainly in England that is the case (as the miserable tally of 16 reviews on this site for a 30 year old film testifies!). It's incredible - I've never seen a film with so much verbal conflict. Every scene seems to have a barny (argument) in it, but do you ever grow tired of them? No you don't! That is because they appear completely natural and not contrived at all - full credit to everyone there. My favourite character is Jock, what a complete an utter rotter! And the hilarious thing is he thinks he is really popular! Love it.

My preference, and this is not a criticism, would have been to have all the fun at the club plus more of a study of the wayward club star's relationship with his partner. I thought her transition from a non-competitive hippy type into a protective and proud wife could have been fascinating and very interesting to watch. But hey that's just me.

I would recommend this film to anyone.
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Waiting for a remake
nicholas_blackmore20 September 2000
Great play, pity about the screenplay is all I can say.

This play remains one of the most insightful views into the world of sports cum business ever scripted. Even truer today than when the play was written, it paints a picture of a club having to face the fact that loyalty and honour don't mean much in the modern game, either to players or their employers. Those who don't or won't accept the new hard nosed and ruthless system seem destined to fail - although the final scene offers a glimmer of hope. The whole thing is served with a big dash of humour - the scene where the bumbling old Jock unknowingly tokes up with troubled star player Geoff and is led through an increasingly unbelievable story of Geoff's patricide and attraction for his sister is priceless.

It is a far deeper examination of the different views of the game and motives of the characters than Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday, which is a thousand times more flashy but also considerably more simplistic and unsubtle in its characterisations.

So it is a great play, and if you don't have a theatrical of it handy, the film is better than just reading it.

But the film was made on low production values and without much desire for realism. As a result, there is a significant cringe effect, which distracts from the point of the film. The scene of Collingwood training with a total of about six guys kicking a couple of footballs around encapsulates the refusal of the producers to just go the extra few yards to make this film a little realistic.

If the play is on, see it. Such is the quality of the play, hopefully sooner or later there will be a film remake. Otherwise, see the film, but ignore the visuals and concentrate on the screenplay.
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10/10
Up there Cazale
edgeofreality30 August 2020
Highly enjoyable if or because it seems somewhat cliched. Strong acting and several memorable, humorous scenes. The author clearly knows and is fond of his characters, even the rotten ones. The scenes of that strange Australian religion called footy are fun to watch.
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10/10
i reckoned a modern version would be good
andyt2914 March 2007
The movie was great i'd like to see a up to date version with current AFL players i reckoned it be one that would work if it was remade :) bring Back Jack Thompson :D I bought the DVD and its now on Pay TV Fox Classics :D the movie hasn't really dated gee look at a young John Howard to him today big changes you wouldn't at him now i read he was around 29 when he was in The Club. great scenes of Melbourne, why did they have to base it on Collingwood ;) surly they could have done more then 1 i love the up their Cazaly great tune :) it was good to see real Footy when they played for the love of sport. Now its a Business money money money ,
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10/10
Relentlessly barbed, literary classic is 'Up There with Cazaly!'
ameivas4 July 2016
"Everything is so awful in this movie it's funny," noted a previous review that awarded the film but one star. How right that is, but not in the sense meant...everything that happens in this splendidly rhetorical saga of a small Aussie Rules Football club is so awful that it's utterly and memorably hilarious. Never mind that sports films can be dull, that isn't the focus. A declining Melbourne footy club buys an expensive player, resented by the team, who is stoned much of the time. The club president, arrested for an assault on a stripper, is a just successful pie salesman with money who loves the game. The coach, cheated of fame when he was a player and formerly subject to alcohol problems, struggles to save his job and do it well at the same time. An ex-coaching board member wants to defeat the current coach before his own record is beaten. The business manager is concerned only with profit. The team captain is in danger of being traded. David Williamson's acerbic play reaches the screen with a dream Australian cast who fight each other in the boardroom with such verbal sting it will leave your ears red. Jack Thompson in his prime, John Howard when he was thin, Graham Kennedy at his wits' best, Frank Wilson and Alan Cassell driving verbal nails and vintage location setting exactly where the story is depicted...plus actual players from the time. THE CLUB will stay with you for life, regardless of when you see it. Seldom is a movie taken from a play so successfully transferred. The musical theme, "Up There Cazaly," a dedication to famed player Roy Cazaly, adds icing to a finely layered literary cake. Ten big ones, cobber.
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Understanding football doesn't stop you liking it
Philby-329 September 2001
Warning: Spoilers
WARNING: SPOILER AHEAD.

Screened by the ABC here in Sydney on the night of this year's Aussie Rules Grand Final, this little piece is showing its age and its minimal production values, but it is still more interesting to watch than, say `Any Given Sunday'. It was written by David Williamson from his play and directed by Bruce Beresford, who has since gone on to greater things (`Driving Miss Daisy', `Black Robe').

Williamson specialises in teasing out hidden resentments and long-standing hurts from his characters, and in the context of professional sport the combination of testosterone, ambition, stupidity and poor communication skills provides him with plenty of material for the Act 3 catharsis. He is very careful not to rely on caricature: Jock (Frank Wilson), the nearest person to a villain here, is not completely unsympathetic, and the `hero' Laurie the coach (Jack Thompson) is not superman either. Play, and the players are not central to the action; it is largely a boardroom drama and victory on the field comes as a coda. This is just as well as the match scenes are woeful - at least in that area Ollie Stone in `Any Given Sunday' outdoes them.

For this viewer, it was interesting to see the young John Howard (the actor, not prime minister) who has since become one of Australia's leading stage and TV actors, as an athletic and intelligent dissident from football ideology. It was poignant to see the great Graham Kennedy, now retired and ill, at the height of his powers in the role of Ted, the club president, a pie manufacturer who has never played a senior game, yet who has been obsessed by football and the club since he was six. The degree of devotion of fans to football clubs is a striking feature of Australian society – woeful, perhaps, but it's there.

As several reviewers have suggested, this is one Aussie semi-classic that would stand a re-make. I don't think Ollie Stone is the one to do it though. Maybe Lee Tamahori (`Once Were Warriors') is the guy. He understands the importance of tribal history and the need to channel aggression. Williamson's dialogue stands up well, though it is probably a bit genteel for current tastes. It was interesting to note that players with a penchant for sticking their fingers up an opposing player's rectum at an opportune moment is not a new problem. Still, I suppose that's better than getting hold of the other side's medical records looking for weaknesses to exploit such as previous bone injuries – a strategy allegedly followed by certain U S football coaches. We're not quite that desperate to win down here – I hope so anyway.
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Not as good as the book - but worth the ending
Bass29 September 1999
"The Club" by David Williamson was an excellent play which addressed many issues about the changing face of sport. This particular film does justice to the play by having actors that give solid and believable performances. If you have seen the play, you may not enjoy certain aspects of this film, but the use of more then a single room or set adds a new dimension to the story. Footage of actual games as well as real club locations is added. Perhaps the best part of this film is the ending as it is very true and satisfying. Worth watching - even if you have no interest in the sport of Aussie Rules.
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