The Guardian (USA)

That Peter Crouch Film review – goodnature­d documentar­y about Premier League hero

- Andrew Pulver

In an era when anyone with a chunky social media follower count can get their own documentar­y, it’s bit of a relief that someone as eminently likable as footballer Peter Crouch is subject to the streaming-platform treatment. In truth, this film is basically a bit of brand enhancemen­t, following on from Crouch’s post-football podcast and Crouchfest live show, and as such doesn’t go anywhere particular­ly unexpected.

Crouch, of course, was the gawky striker who, in the footballin­g parlance, proved the doubters wrong by making it into the Premier League, winning the FA Cup with Liverpool, scoring a hat-trick for England and – most potently for the legend – improvisin­g that dopey robot-dance goal celebratio­n and marrying model Abbey Clancy. (Not for nothing is his most famous line the one about what he would be if he wasn’t a footballer.)

Well, Crouch enlarges on the feelings of awkwardnes­s he felt as a teenager trying to break into the game, and even after having done so the trauma of failing to score in his first dozen and a half games for Liverpool. (Improbably, it turns out he met Clancy the night he broke his Liverpool duck; as she remarks, “That was his lucky day.”) And for all Crouch’s sensitivit­y as a youngster, there’s one or two amazing details that suggest there was a fair amount of gormlessne­ss going on as well; I’d suggest most 24-year-olds know about the existence of bedsheets.

Crouch, however, shows his innate shrewdness in knowing he had to try and set up his post-football life while he was still in the spotlight (“plenty of ex-players told me the moment you retire, no one remembers; so I wanted to do things while I was still current”), and he certainly had the backing of a number of big-name managers – Harry Redknapp, Rafael Benítez, Sven-Göran Eriksson – who kept the faith during Crouch’s wobbliest moments.

Fortunatel­y Crouch’s travails don’t appear to have cut too deeply – “that was the nearest I got to be being depressed,” he says, after being booed by a stadium full of Manchester United fans when he was subbed on during an England internatio­nal – and if there’s a villain of the piece it might be his hypercompe­titive dad Bruce who, it transpires, was one of those parents who gets into fights on the touchline of kids’ games.

Despite all this, Crouch does seem to be a nice guy, which is his and this film’s USP, even if some of the film’s key messages are repeated two or three times. There’s a fair bit of padding, too; it’s clear that much of his playing career, including his time at Stoke, the longest spell of his career at a single club, can’t have been that riveting. Still, this is good-natured, entertaini­ng stuff.

• That Peter Crouch Film is released on 22 June on Prime Video.

 ?? ?? Head and shoulders above, er, most people … That Peter Crouch Film. Photograph: Pete Dadds/Amazon Prime
Head and shoulders above, er, most people … That Peter Crouch Film. Photograph: Pete Dadds/Amazon Prime

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