The Independent on Saturday

Fully immerses viewer but lacks spark for non-fans

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Pele Running time: 1 hr 47 min Starring: Kevin de Paula, Leonardo Lima Carvalho, Seu Jorge,Vincent D’Onofrio, Colm Meaney, Rodrigo Santino, Mariana Nunes, Diego Boneta MOREthan halfway through Jeff and Mike Zimbalist’s biopic about the world’s greatest-ever soccer player, the man himself shows up in a brief cameo. After the actor playing his younger self nearly careens into him into a hotel lobby, Pele turns to the camera, utters a single line and smiles broadly. It’s a delightful moment, but it’s also telling.

The dazzling flash of charisma does more to signify why he became an internatio­nal icon than the entirety of Pele: Birth of a Legend.

The film, which dutifully recounts his extraordin­ary journey from a Brazilian slum to overnight superstard­om as a result of – spoiler alert – Brazil’s first ever World Cup victory in 1958, will no doubt please aficionado­s of “the beautiful game”, as Pele famously dubbed it. Unfortunat­ely, it lacks the spark to appeal to non-fans.

The story begins with 9-year-old Edson Arantes do Nascimento (Leonardo Lima Carvalho), or Dico, as he was nicknamed by his parents, joyfully playing the game in bare feet with his friends in the streets of his poor village. When Brazil loses the 1950 World Cup final, the heartbroke­n boy promises his father, a former football player, that someday he’ll win the World Cup for Brazil.

Cut to several years later, when the now 15-year-old boy – mockingly called Pele because of his mispronoun­cing the name of a local star goalkeeper – manages to enter a local tournament with his friends and makes a powerful impression with his virtuosic playing. He’s recruited by a scout and works his way up to a profession­al level. But his unorthodox, fluid playing style – dubbed “Ginga” – leads to conflicts with his coaches who argue that it’s beneath the dignity of the game, at least until he comes under the supportive leadership of coach Vicente Feola (Vincent D’Onorio,).

While this film’s dramatisat­ion is strictly by-the-numbers, its superbly staged soccer sequences use inventive photograph­ic and editing techniques to fully immerse the viewer.

Young non-pro Kevin de Paula Rosa ably fulfills the considerab­le physical demands of the title role, and convincing­ly conveys his character’s ebullient personalit­y. And the supporting cast is impressive. But ironically, the film’s most exciting scenes arrive with the end credits, in which thrilling black and white footage of the World Cup match and highlights of Pele’s legendary career are showcased. – Hollywood Reporter

 ??  ?? GINGA: Leonardo Lima Carvalho plays the young Pele in a film about the football legend’s rise to stardom on the field.
GINGA: Leonardo Lima Carvalho plays the young Pele in a film about the football legend’s rise to stardom on the field.

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