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Goal II: Living the Dream
Description
The football career of Santiago Munez changes as he gets a chance to move from English club Newcastle to the famous Real Madrid but his thrown into a disarray when his accomplishments threatens his ties with others in his life.
The football career of Santiago Munez changes as he gets a chance to move from English club Newcastle to the famous Real Madrid but his thrown into a disarray when his accomplishments threatens his ties with others in his life.
Actors:
Shammi Aulakh,
Sean Pertwee,
Matt Sutton,
David Beckham,
María Calazza,
Stephen Dillane,
José María Gutiérrez,
Alfredo Rodríguez,
Sergio Ramos,
Laura Lamzouri Edagdaqui,
Fredrik Ljungberg,
...»
Shammi Aulakh
29 August 1974, London, England, UK
Sean Pertwee
4 June 1964, London, England, UK
Matt Sutton
David Beckham
2 May 1975, Leytonstone, London, England, UK
María Calazza
Stephen Dillane
27 March 1957, London, England, UK
José María Gutiérrez
31 October 1976, Madrid, Spain
Alfredo Rodríguez
20 January 1993, Torrance, California, USA
Sergio Ramos
30 March 1986, Camas, Seville, Spain
Laura Lamzouri Edagdaqui
Fredrik Ljungberg
16 April 1977, Vittsjö, Scania, Sweden
Director:
Jaume Collet-Serra
Jaume Collet-Serra
23 March 1974, Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Country:
United Kingdom
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February 09, 2007
Becker, who made the first instalment just about passable, is bland here while Alessandro Nivola, who plays his best pal, looks rightly bored.
Globe and Mail
August 29, 2008
Goal II clumsily telegraphs all of its moves far in advance.February 09, 2007
Not quite the guilty pleasure the first movie was, Goal! 2 can't quite stick it in the back of the net, pull off the double etc, etc...October 04, 2007
The idea of turning a 10-minute idea into a trilogy of movies seemed imposing at first, but Goal II continues the franchise's recipe of personality over originality.February 09, 2007
Next stop the World Cup . . . can't wait.February 18, 2007
One isn't eager to see extra time played and the 'To be continued' line at the end is more ominous than enticing. Once again, film-makers demonstrate that old adage, never give soccer an even break.August 29, 2008
Despite the predictable, cliché-riddled script, the soap-opera hokum that passes for drama, Goal II somehow works.April 03, 2009
If your kids play soccer, they may appreciate this tall tale of Santi's rise from obscurity to shin-padded glory, but once you pop in the DVD, chances are you won't want to stick around.
London Evening Standard
February 09, 2007
I won't tell you the result, but I will say that Arsene Wenger would be wise to avoid Goal 2 in case he suffers from terminal apoplexy.February 07, 2007
A game of two halves, both of them dire.February 10, 2007
Intriguing to watch and well-played by the engaging cast.August 29, 2008
Bullet time, pixellation, flashy graphics, slow-motion-sweat, all wrapped around a rather flimsy story about the kid from the barrio dealing with paparazzi, millions of fans and a salary in the millions of Euros.