Yesterday's Hero | |
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Directed by | Neil Leifer |
Written by | Jackie Collins |
Produced by | Elliott Kastner Oscar Lerman Ken Regan |
Starring | Ian McShane Suzanne Somers Adam Faith Paul Nicholas |
Edited by | Antony Gibbs |
Music by | Stanley Myers |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Yesterday's Hero is a 1979 British drama film directed by Neil Leifer and starring Ian McShane, Suzanne Somers, Adam Faith, Paul Nicholas and Cary Elwes (in his film debut). [1] [2] It also features Glynis Barber and Emma Samms in early performances. [3] The screenplay was by novelist Jackie Collins, but was an original work and not based on one of her books. [4] Although it has echoes of the life of the former player George Best, the film is not biographical. [5]
In England in the 1970s, former star football player Rod Turner is now an alcoholic and playing in non-League football. Football League Third Division club "The Saints", owned by pop star Clint Simon, are having a successful run in the FA Cup and win their quarter-finals match. However, their star striker is injured, and, unable to find a suitable replacement player from another club, Simon has the idea of hiring Turner, his childhood idol, over the protests of team manager Jake Marsh. Simon approaches Turner and takes him on a trip to Paris, where Turner meets his old flame Cloudy, a singer who is making a record with Simon. Turner accepts the offer to play for his team and, after training with them, plays in the semi-final match, but at half-time he is caught drinking in the dressing room by Marsh and is banned from playing in the final. Turner becomes torn between his current girlfriend Susan and Cloudy, after Cloudy takes him in after another drinking episode. Turner is on the bench in the final, but is brought on as a substitute and scores the winning goal.
Variety wrote: "In departing from her well-trodden territory of penthouse frolics and highlife melodrama, and attempting a plotline where sex is merely incidental, writer Jackie Collins has come unstuck. Apparently deserted by her normally keen market judgement, she's failed to enliven a banal but potentially adequate narrative with any of her customary edge. ... Suzanne Somers alone overcomes Neil Leifer's paceless direction and some downright yesteryear musical numbers with surprisingly gutsy characterization of a basically vaporous role – Nicholas' costar, who becomes unhappily involved with McShane. But given the film's undistinguished technical credits, and passe concepts of glamor and emotional conflict, she can do little to offset the prevailing dullness." [6]
Time Out wrote: "Jackie Collins' script is a paste job of scandal-sheet sports page headlines (boozing striker, hard-line manager, rock star chairman), while US sports photographer Leifer works backwards from footage of the Southampton-Nottingham Forest League Cup Final to give a hilarious sense of skewed felicity to the comic strip giant-killing progress of The Saints and their repentant super-sub sinner. John Motson commentates. Irresistibly bad." [7]
Leslie Halliwell wrote "Totally uninteresting sporting version of The Road to Ruin." [8]
The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 1/5 stars, writing: "The end result of this Jackie Collins-scripted effort is strictly fourth division." [9]