Arab Times

Soccer-fixated coming-of-age comedy ‘Bromley’ mild, good-natured

‘Finding heroism in mediocrity’

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TBy Guy Lodge

here’s a sweet message at the heart of “The Bromley Boys” about finding the heroism in mediocrity, thought it’s one not best served by the film being entirely mediocre itself. Adapted from a sepia-tinted memoir by British author Dave Roberts – detailing the childhood origins of his obsession with the consistent­ly second-rate Bromley soccer team – Steve Kelly’s lightweigh­t film spins allegedly true events into the stuff of pure sitcom: affable enough, but so glibly inauthenti­c as to make “Bend It Like Beckham” look like cinema verite by comparison. It’s curious how the world’s most popular sport maintains such a thin roster of truly classic movies in its honor; that is unchanged here.

Perhaps ongoing “Game of Thrones” mania is to credit for a belated, somewhat surprising US release for “The Bromley Boys”, a year after it failed to score on home turf: It’s led by appealingl­y gawky series alum Brenock O’Connor, as a socially inept teen who improbably intervenes in his beloved team’s long losing streak. If local audiences didn’t turn out in droves for a largely parochial film that hinges on inbuilt viewer affection for deeply entrenched English institutio­ns – be it non-league football nerdism or the presence of “EastEnders” veteran Martine McCutcheon in the supporting cast – it’s hard to see what’s in it for the internatio­nal crowd.

The film’s opening scene prompts memories of a more polished but similarly cornball piece of British sporting nostalgia, 2006’s “SixtySix”, as 11-year-old Dave (O’Connor) disrupts a dour family camping trip with his jubilant celebratio­n over England’s 1966 World Cup victory – to the bemusement of his stuffy, soccer-loathing dad Donald (Alan Davies, who also narrates proceeding­s as the older Dave).

Dream

Stringy, jauntily bespectacl­ed and bullied even by the girls at the posh private school to which his aspiration­al working-class parents have sent him, Dave is the kind of soccer devotee who would never dream of getting on the pitch himself.

He just wants to watch, a habit his salt-of-the-earth mom Gertrude (Martine McCutcheon) attempts to humor by knitting him a team scarf for Bromley, their nearest soccer club.

The team is hopeless – literal leagues below other boys’ favorites like Manchester United and Leeds – but Dave takes the shabby scarf as a sign that they have chosen him rather than the other way round. Becoming a steadfast presence on the sidelines at matches and practice sessions alike, he swiftly ingratiate­s himself with the team’s older sadsack supporters, as well as Ruby (Savannah Baker), the awkward teenage daughter of the team’s shady manager Charlie (Jamie Foreman). She’s a useful ally to have as Dave and his bumbling fellow fans hatch a harebraine­d scheme to reverse Bromley’s fortunes; she’s also – you’ll never guess – a radiant swan once her Coke-bottle glasses come off.

This is the approximat­e level of narrative sophistica­tion we’re working with throughout, particular­ly in a long, lumbering middle act that forges farce from strained misunderst­andings: Warren Dudley’s screenplay, which one has to assume has played fast and loose with Roberts’ life story, offers more relentless­ly good cheer than it does actual wit. It’s the film’s two young stars, rather than their heavily mugging adult counterpar­ts, who enliven the schematic proceeding­s: Baker, especially, whittles something brightly human from the unshaped stereotype she’s handed.

Tech credits are on the perfunctor­y end of televisual, betraying Kelly’s background directing such venerable British soaps as “Casualty” and “The Bill”. A soundtrack stuffed with 1960s British Invasion classics from the likes of Dusty Springfiel­d and the Spencer Davis Group keeps things bouncy, even when the film’s oddly stiff pacing does not. 106 minutes is hardly a testing length, yet “The Bromley Boys” still feels as if it’s run significan­tly into extra time by its foregone feelgood conclusion. “It only takes 90 minutes to fall in love,” runs the poster tagline, referencin­g the traditiona­l length of a soccer match: The film could stand to take its own advice. (RTRS)

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