Belfast Telegraph

How Reds finally ended 30 years of hurt

New Liverpool Football Club documentar­y The End Of The Storm joins the team on a rollercoas­ter journey through 2020, finds Danielle de Wolfe

- The End Of The Storm is available now on digital, DVD & Blu Ray

On July 22 2020, the players, staff and supporters of Liverpool Football Club were able to experience a moment 30 years in the making.

Lifting the Premier League trophy aloft in front of an empty 53,000-capacity Anfield stadium, Liverpool’s victory was made all the sweeter given the trials and tribulatio­ns this close-knit team had overcome.

The club had claimed the elusive title in the midst of a global pandemic — one which saw football matches worldwide suspended for months on end and questions raised over whether the team would once again see victory snatched from their grasp.

Liverpool were indisputab­ly in the form of their life; manager Jurgen Klopp stood arms akimbo on the touchline as a team capable of longevity took the title with seven games in hand.

In a season that will forever be immortalis­ed as one of the most dramatic in sporting history, director James Erskine was there to capture every moment.

The vision behind new sporting documentar­y The End Of The Storm, Erskine gains intimate access to some of the club’s top internatio­nal players, alongside candid interviews with manager Klopp and club hero Sir Kenny Dalglish.

However, the Billie and One Night In Berlin filmmaker is quick to assert that the documentar­y’s appeal isn’t restricted to Liverpool’s fiercely loyal fan base.

“It’s great if you’re a Liverpool fan but I think it illustrate­s, through Liverpool, the wider value of sport and the excitement and meaning that sport can give, especially when we’re not getting joy out of other things,” says Erskine.

“It’s this incredible story at the heart of it, but it’s actually about the value of the emotions that we can draw from watching a sport and watching it with our families.

“Fathers and sons or fathers and daughters are as important as the actual specificit­y of the club.”

It’s a view reinforced by the fact that, despite having northern roots, Erskine himself has no connection to the Liverpool team.

“I support Man City,” he declares. “I grew up in Manchester, but sometimes if you’re making it from the outside you’re able to convey the reality of something more truly than if you are burdened with the weight of your own fandom.”

The premise for the documentar­y emerged following the success of Erskine’s Amazon Prime series This Is Football; a series of six feature-length movies that delve into the emotional power sport possesses.

“We’d followed three Liverpool fans in Kigali, Rwanda, and used them to explore how football — and specifical­ly their associatio­n with one football club — had allowed them to rebuild their lives and families post-genocide,” he says.

“That had won lots of awards and had great emotional impact and had been seen by the hierarchy of the club — even Jurgen himself had seen it and been moved by it.

“So, we were invited to come in and see if there was another film we wanted to make about Liverpool.”

Exploring the unique dynamic between managerial staff and players was always set to be an intrinsic part of the club’s story.

Famed for his straight-talking attitude, manager Klopp (53) has managed to create an atmosphere both inside and outside the dressing room that fosters loyalty and respect in equal measure.

“I think Jurgen would always say it was down to the players but I think Klopp obviously takes a huge amount of the credit,” says Erskine matter-of-factly.

“Over five years, he’s built a team around the way he wants to play — he’s tactically very clear. And I think he’s also able to psychologi­cally support his players, possibly like no other coach.

“I think he’s able to get in their heads.”

However, Erskine makes clear that Klopp’s success as a manager has not materialis­ed out of thin air.

“Klopp was not very successful as a player — he was successful and he got to be a profession­al player and that’s every boy’s dream, but as he said to me, ‘I do win a lot but I had to learn to win by losing a lot.’

“Interestin­gly in the film, we use Jordan Henderson quite a lot and explore Jordan Henderson as being a character who’s had very low moments in spite of great natural talent.

“I think when you understand the film the way that Jurgen has managed to bring the most out of Jordan as a player but also as a person, by the player’s own admission, then I think you start to understand the impact.

“The dynamic of Klopp’s influence on the club and how he built a much stronger fan base since he’d been there was the starting point — and then the pandemic kicked in and that made the story resonate that much more deeply.”

 ??  ?? Glory days:
End Of The Storm takes an inside look into Liverpool’s Premier League title win
Glory days: End Of The Storm takes an inside look into Liverpool’s Premier League title win

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