The Football Factory (film)

The Football Factory

Promotional poster
Directed by Nick Love
Produced by Allan Niblo
James Richardson
Written by Nick Love
John King (novel)
Starring Danny Dyer
Frank Harper
Tamer Hassan
Roland Manookian
Neil Maskell
Dudley Sutton
Music by Ivor Guest
Cinematography Damian Bromley
Edited by Stuart Gazzard
Production
company
Distributed by Momentum Pictures
(United Kingdom)
Touchstone Pictures
(United States)
Release dates
14 May 2004
Running time
91 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Box office £623,138

The Football Factory is a 2004 British film directed by Nick Love. The film stars Danny Dyer, Tamer Hassan, Frank Harper, Roland Manookian, Neil Maskell and Dudley Sutton. It is loosely based on the novel of the same name by John King and is the first foray into film making by video game producers Rockstar Games, credited as executive producers.

In 2004, Chelsea F.C. football supporters' fanzine cfcuk produced a special edition - "cfcuk - The Football Factory" to coincide with the release of the film.

Plot

Tommy Johnson (Dyer) is a member of a violent Chelsea hooligan firm. His friends and fellow hooligans include Tommy's best friend Rod King (Maskell), Billy Bright (Harper), and volatile younger members Zeberdee (Manookian) and Raf (MacNab). Tommy spends his days drinking, using drugs, womanising, and kicking people's heads in, much to the dismay of his grandfather Bill Farrell (Sutton), a pensioner and veteran who plans to move to Australia with his best friend Albert (Junkin).

Tommy begins to have second thoughts about his life path during a fight with the Tottenham hooligan firm. Tommy, Billy, and Rod are arrested for assaulting two Stoke City fans whilst travelling to an away match. These actions draw the ire of Harris, the leader of the Chelsea firm, whose attempts to keep order are thwarted by Billy's violent outbursts.

Rod begins a relationship with the court clerk at their arraignment and she pressures him to skip his weekend meets. Zeberdee and his friend Raff accidentally rob Billy's house and are forced to stand in his living room, whilst Billy's children throw darts at them. Billy deals with his increasing loneliness after he overhears Harris discussing his irrelevance. Bill's plan to retire to Australia is temporarily thwarted when Albert dies the night before they are to leave.

Early in the film, Tommy is caught by the brother of a girl he picked up at a club. He is saved when Rod hits the man on the head with a cricket bat. The girl's brother turns out to also be the brother of the rival Millwall firm's leader, Fred (Hassan), who then hunts Tommy down throughout the entire film. The film culminates in a pitched battle between the Chelsea and Millwall firms. Rod (after a few espressos and a line of cocaine), leaves a dinner with his girlfriend's parents after insulting them, and attends the "meet". Tommy is severely beaten by Fred and a group of Millwall hooligans, and ends up in the hospital with Bill, who, in the meanwhile, has suffered a heart attack.

A recurring subplot concerns a racist taxi driver (Jamie Foreman), whom the characters encounter at various points in the film.

At the end of the film, Tommy decides that his place is at the firm with his friends, Bill moves to Australia and Billy Bright is incarcerated for seven years after being arrested at the Millwall meet (ironically, whilst saving Harris from being arrested). Zeberdee is killed by a drug dealer whom he had previously robbed, fulfilling a recurring dream that plagued Tommy throughout the film.

Cast

Differences from The Book Series

The Football Factory Trilogy consists of three novels by John King: The Football Factory, Headhunters, and England Away. Though the film shares a title with the first novel in the trilogy, the film deviates significantly from the source material. The most significant differences are changes to characters appearing in both works and the omission of plots or characters in the novel.

Tommy Johnson is arguably the main character in the novel but is absent from many chapters. In the film he is undeniably the main character and the few scenes that he does not appear in or narrate all involve characters he is close with (e.g. Billy Bright, the second-in-command of his firm or Rod, his "best mate"). Bright and Rod are also examples of characters that have the same name in both the film and novels but are substantively different. Additionally, the film omits some characters and plot lines entirely (only those plot lines actually appearing in the first novel are discussed below) .

Examples of Differences with Characters Having the Same Name:

In the novels, Billy Bright is not married, has a crippled arm, is overtly racist (except in the presence of "Black Paul", a Chelsea hooligan of African descent), and is an orphan. By contrast, in the film he is married with children, has no physical deformity of his arm, is xenophobic but not explicitly racist, and is portrayed in a flashback as a young boy chasing recent immigrants out of his neighborhood with his father. The film never mentions whether Bright is adopted and it is neither mentioned nor implied that this is not his birth father.

In both the novels and film Rod is portrayed as a close friend of Tommy Johnson, but rather than being "best mates" as in the film the novel portrays them as part of a close-knit group of four or five members of the firm. This group, including Johnson, commonly berate him for his bachelor part held several years before the events of the novel, where he had sex on stage with a stripper while heavily intoxicated. This incident is never discussed in the film because Rod is portrayed as single though a subplot involves him potentially settling down.

Plot Differences:

The violent rivalry between the Chelsea firm (commonly known outside the works as the "Headhunters") and the Millwall firm ("Bushwhackers") plays a central role in both works. However, in the film Millwall's firm is made up largely of people of Turkish descent, whereas in the novel the firm is portrayed as primarily working-class White Britons (and indeed the narrators complain about Millwall's ties to neo-Nazism.)

See also

External links

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