The Beautiful Game (Victor Buhler, 2012)
By Stuart Muller
The Beautiful Game turned out to be the perfect documentary to stoke my World Cup fever. Sadly, my own South Africa didn't qualify this time, with tragic consequences for world football; vuvuzelas will be few and far between in Brazil. Devastating, I know.
In my heart I've known I should care about the upcoming World Cup - big sporting events are wonder filled celebrations of humanity - but I just didn't seem to have any shits to give. Enter, The Beautiful Game; a rejuvenating reminder of football's profound significance in Africa.
The premise is simple; a collection of stories about individuals living challenging lives in Africa, who have been powerfully affected - even transformed - by football. Most of the film follows West African subjects (a longstanding regional powerhouse in African football), and thus fortuitously offers a glimpse into four of the five African countries appearing in the current World Cup; Cameroon, Nigeria, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ghana (Algeria being the 5th).
As the film progresses, it reveals the full context of their stories, and begins to explore how love for the game has uplifted and sustained not just the film's subjects, but countries, and indeed the entire continent. The stories are varied and poignant, encompassing sons, mothers, daughters, and cripples, but interweave and illuminate each other in a way that draws the film together. I found it greater than the sum of its parts.
Throughout the world, football is hope made manifest, but the often especially harsh realities of Africa make hope especially treasured here. Football matters everywhere, but it would be hard to argue that it matters to the human soul anywhere more so than in Africa. This film reminded me why football is beautiful, and why this opportunity for African teams to compete against the world is enthralling.
whips out his vuvuzela
BBRBBRBBRRWWWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!
How to watch The Beautiful Game: Please note that this film is not available on DVD, and is unlikely ever to be. It is, however, currently streaming on Netflix in the US, Canada, UK and Northern Europe, and is showing on BT Sport in the UK and on the AMC/Sundance channel elsewhere in Europe, Latin America and Asia. It will be available for download from the film's website
later this summer.