Goal The Dream — Begins 2005
Becker, a telenovela star, is perfectly earnest as Santiago—perhaps too earnest for some critics. But around him, British acting royalty elevates the material. Stephen Dillane brings a weary, poetic dignity to the scout. Anna Friel is warm and grounded as the team physio and love interest. And then there is the late, great Brian Cox as the foul-mouthed, chain-smoking coach Glen Foy. “You think this is a game?” Cox snarls. “This is war . This is the only war you’ll ever win.” It’s a career-best performance in a film you’d never expect to contain one.
A minor masterpiece of sports sentimentality. Essential viewing for any football fan—and a surprisingly effective tearjerker for everyone else.
The film made a then-groundbreaking deal with FIFA and the Premier League. That means no fake CGI corners, no impossible physics. When Santiago curls a free-kick into the top bin, it’s actor Kuno Becker—who trained obsessively with former Real Madrid star Zinedine Zidane—actually performing the technique. The climactic match against Liverpool uses real Newcastle players (Alan Shearer, Shay Given) and genuine stadium footage. The result is visceral. You feel the thud of the tackle. Goal The Dream Begins 2005
In 2005, a small, unassuming football film dribbled past expectations and into the hearts of fans worldwide. Twenty years on, Goal! The Dream Begins remains a cultural anomaly—a sports movie that actually got football right.
“Dame más.” (Give me more.) – Santiago Muñez Goal! The Dream Begins is available to stream on [platforms vary by region]. The 20th anniversary restoration is rumored for a 2025 release. Becker, a telenovela star, is perfectly earnest as
The final shot is not of the trophy or the crowd. It is of Santiago, alone in the tunnel, touching the Newcastle crest on his chest. He smiles. And for ninety beautiful minutes, so do we.
But that’s precisely why we return to it. On a rainy Sunday afternoon, when the real football feels too cynical, Goal! offers a balm. It reminds us why we fell in love with the game in the first place: the dream that a kid with nothing but talent and heart can, against all odds, run out onto the pitch and change his life. Anna Friel is warm and grounded as the
The third film, Goal III: Taking on the World (2009), was a direct-to-DVD disaster that followed secondary characters during the 2006 World Cup. Kuno Becker appears only briefly. It is best forgotten.