Prepubescent benny boys taking on battle hardened proper geezers and the aforementioned win. Yeah right 😂 The battle of Maze Hill 2002 would be a much more accurate description of the outcome in reality.
Mistaken fella, the old bill were okish. Till they realized they had been taken the pi** out of them for years whenvtgeyvrelaisedxa shirt cost more than they earned in a month..west yorks and south Yorkshire with the transport police became like animals, oh how we laughed at the Old Bill 😂😂
In 1979 i was at school aged 14 there was mods or grebs or normals but i do t remember seeing gangs of designer sportswear basin haircut yobs maybe we were a few years behind in derbyshire
Most of my friend don't like this movie, but I think it's probably the best hooligan movia in terms of cinematography, style, character depth and soundtrack.
Funny every bank holiday we'd pile on the train from Leeds to Blackpool..barely saw a blackpool lad just remembering chasing wigan up and down 😂 the beach
Total and utter cowards .Real men fight life bring up children ..pay the bills look after their wives and partners and are there when the chips are down .Anybody can fight ..These guys were always cowards big men in a gang in a pub but quiet on their own .Brave men with Stanley knives
Complete opposite As I said the best were always highly outnumbered This film is only true to a point...weapons as a last resort Never be totally convinced by any movie...real is much better
Love this film... elvis is a struggling heroin addict who fancies carty sexually but being in the closet can never reveal his true feelings. Pretty deep shit this
They had a reputation no doubt but couldn't bring the numbers like Man U, Liverpool, Leeds etc. As far as London clubs go WHU and Arsenal were just as active. Arsenal had some naughty fellas back in the day......
@@liberaldriller9884 These naughty fellas couldn't defend the NB against us, or the numerous hidings they took from Spurs...seen them all Jenkins, Miller, Denton etc...give credit where credit is due Gooners took it to WHU off plot on Hackney Rd...Millwall was all rep/hype
To everybody writing " Dont use weapons", This movie is supposed to take place in the 80-90s if Im not mistaken, and back then the hooliganscene was diffrent comparing to today. Just ask the old dudes that was fighting back then :) Awesome movie!
these football movies are morally dubious, the makers of these movies will always claim they are anti violence, but when you look at the way the fights are set up, with thumping nostalgic songs playing and artistic camera work they are actually relishing in it. Thats fine if they would just admit they like making violent football hooligan movies, but when you see the directors being interviewed they will say they hate on screen Hollywood violence, and their movie is showing violence in a real way that will deter kids from it. What pretentious bollocks I know young people that watch these movies and say they love nothing but the violent scenes. Any anti violent moral to the stories just go over their heads. If your making a violent football movie that caters for fans of footie violence, with scenes off guys being nutted and slashed just admit that, don't go saying your movie is a deep thought provoking study of social values. ITS A GEEZER MOVIE FOR FANS OF NUTS MAGAZINE END OF...
+Bryan Partington Err...its morally dubious so you can make up your own mind. Your comment, and/or indeed any other comment, only reinforces that. That you comment on RUclips and this prompts a response from another, whether n agreement or disagreement means that the movie has an effect, and has value as a means of discourse. Making something which is didactic, that is, telling you what you should think is both childish and patronising. When someone told you that something was good. bad or whatever just because they told you that it was, didn't it annoy you?! This movie, far more than a lot of other football hooligan films actually makes a clear point that casual violence isn't glamorous - the protagonist and indeed Elvis too, are not simply sociopaths out for a good time - but like it or not, they represent people, real people, that like a lot of others of that period and today, that they sought, by themselves or collectively, to find ways to express their frustration at the world they inhabit. Perhaps a better question might be WHY is it that there are people that like to watch movies about violence, and indeed glamorise or participate in violence? These films are based on true events that demonstrate that our society (shock, horror) isn't so wonderful: so what then do we do? would you condemn those that feel frustrated by what our society offers them? or would you look at the reasons WHY society fails people to cause them to feel frustrated in the first place? Whatever your answer, you will have YOUR own social values, but you aren't society, you're just part of it, and society is the sum of its parts, whether good or bad. The discussion should and will continue.
No its just another cash in football film riding on the coat tails of football factory and that other pile off crap Green street. I work in an ordinary job with working class lads, and when they talk about these films, they don't come out with all this social commentary, they simply chat about the violence. Now I love violence in horror films and I grew up in the video nasty craze in the eighties, but I don't like films like this that dress themselves up as a statement on society, with some sort of important social message. When in fact they are just another direct to dvd football factory clone, with all the usual cliche characters, nostalgia music and Tarantino style slow mo walk towards the camera. A clockwork orange had something important to say, this however, like all the other football hooligan films that clog up the shelves doesn't. IMO.
Like the Western or the Mafia movie is to American cinema, the football hooligan movie is a classic genre of UK film making. It portrays a lifestyle, and yes its about the violence but only in the same way GTA is about the violence. You watch the movie but that's it. Yes it glorifies the violence but that doesn't turn somebody into a hooligan or make them want to slash someone who is from another town. The prime causes of making someone violent are the way they are socialised.
Paul Murray I never said it turns someone into a hooligan, tribalism in football does that already. However I disagree that football films are to the Brits what Westerns and Mafia movies are to American filmgoers. That genre of films isn't in the same league as those genres,but everyone has their own opinion.
I'm female don't read nuts, but love football but what amazes me is you always find some one making a big statement about hooligans and violence etc..I wonder how they stray on to things like this 🤔 what did you think it was beach volleyball or what were you really searching for and seen this and put your two pennywort in if it offends you don't watch don't let your kids watch end of !
A great day for fun back in the day, long story but though a Blackpool fan i once went to anfield with top lads sheff wed, crime squad and it was fkn crazy 80s, ended up in kemlyn Road stand 50 of us fighting scousers, spilled onto pitch, then in those days all plod did was escort you to your own end, obviously your mob went wild when they realised you'd been rowing in away end, great times.
Anfield .. haha wrong mate the lads went in the Anfield Road End Anfield as seating while the Kop was still terracing and scarfies no point reading rest of tale you just go back to Narnia only time Blackpool had any fun was when Leeds turned up at bank Holidays.. no one has ever rated Wednesday as a firm.. Sheff Utd yes.. game as.. Me thinks you been watching Danny Dyer baa baa delete your comment..Bulls**t..Having to go with another team to Anfield cos your team is in Alliance and Premier League
Your Mob..You're Blackpool but did the Scousers with Wednesday..not your mob..your mates..if you are telling a tale get the punchlines right and the info ..you'll be telling us you had a Stone Island jacket on too haha Jackanory
@@angie-smart-but-casual that was another match then cos I was there with the 50 ocs in kemlyn road ,fighting like fkuk and no wed got sparked it ended up side of the pitch ,outside that stand till dibble escorted us to sheff wed end crazy days .
in my opinion this is the best of the hooligan films. Green street was fun but a little... unrealistic :p football factory is more comedy. Cass is very good, but awaydays is my favorite
The changing of the guard..the skins etc didnt just retire they were beaten into submission..people can learn a lot about these events how empires are won and lost..anyways most sensible people just step aside
Had Liverpool lads mates back in the 80s got invited to Tranmere v Liverpool went on underground from lime Street one cold foggy Tuesday night good turn out used to go out in Greasby and Chelsea night club occasionally mated moved to wirral well his dad did well nice then
Great upload, too bad you didn't add the final scene. The film was a decent effort but not as great as the book, I guess they didn't have the budget. Not a big fan of the whole sexual tension between Carty & Elvis but like the overall atmosphere of the film.
Anyone who thinks this is a great film sorry to burst your bubble it means you weren't around in 1980 ..yes it's tranmere and it's saving grace is Peter storm refused permission to use their Infamous green jacket
i just watched this film and thought it was really good, i grew up in this area ie new ferry eastham etc ...BUT when i looked at the cast list i thought WTF...its full of manx actors trying to play mereysiders...emmmm WHY? its like having a german play churchill in a war film...i know most manxs want to be scouse but this film is taking the pi**
go on wiki and view the cast list....there is at least 10 Manchester actors in it...don't get me wrong they are very good but why use Manchester actors to play scousers?
haha ah yeah their is a few they seem to do the same with manchester based programs apart from shameless corrie is menna be manchester theirs about 1 manc accent init
First off, it's mancs not manx . Manx people are from the isle of man. Second, these are not Scousers, or merseysiders, Tranmere is in Prenton, on the Wirral, CH postcode. They don't have Scouse accents anyway.
@@paulmckernan7518I know that mike and a half makes all the difference in how people sound 😅 not Scouse aswell .. thankfully more interlect than attitude 👍
Wais You can't always rely on your opponents fighting fairly. What if one of them brings a knife? Fights are about surviving, not winning with honour. Take what you can to the fight and hope for the best.
This video was indicated by the algorithm because I was searching about "This is England" but the movie above looks like stupid comparing with "This is England".
Ultras are wannabee casuals you'd think all the countries Italy etc with the clothing and they wear Fred Perry haha watched the film ultras 2020 crying by 8 mins in different planet
Been about both these places and got loads of boys, Sheffield a real fighting city though, and there rivalry second to none, i hung out with ocs for a short while, crime squad sheff wed, wild Times they did need match days to go smash each others pubs up, it was naughty.
No wonder the world's in a mess glorifying the behavour of a total psychopath.. yep, football is fun, edgy and often dangerous, but ripping another human to bits with a stanley knife???
Elvis and the guy who got him in the firm definitely had some serious sexual tension. Always talking about running away together hell just right here in that scene "we'll go through these queers easy" "love it when they say that" sounded like he was aroused rather than acting tough. Good movie to poke fun at get hella stoned to n just crack jokes about those two lovers.
Lol did you watch the whole film? Carty wasn’t in love with Elvis, he was only into girls and he even told Elvis he couldn’t go with him in that way. As for Elvis saying that to the other firm, it’s cos he knew his firm were about to annihilate the other lot, so he enjoyed hearing them thinking that him and the pack were easy, knowing full well that the other firm were in for a brutal kicking
So you weren't involved in 1980 and only have rubbish film makers or wannabees churning out books with claims of this and that..decent tunes though but my 7 year old could have put a better sound track together FACT
The firms weren't this young in 80s slightly older, and as with Blackpool fc, we had 3 firms one was mainly young uns, did there thing, bisons riot squad, but this brings back memories us away in Bolton boxing day 80s did em on mancs Road 11am in the morning, then in the ground, no shit one of our main lads Tom troup broke into the home end segregation gate and no shit, they ran away scattered in there own end we piled in fkn great, and after the game we was at it, parked up on one of there estates before the game, when we went back they realised an hire van was from bpool and 100 of us against 100s of them most of us got sore faces and got to admit the cops coming saved us that day, also Bolton let tyres down on most of our motors, cops weren't amused having to hang around lol.
shocking film really. no originality, wearing them stupid green jackets so they all look like their part of a dogging crew. Just not at all genuine. Its like a school trip the fight scenes, feel bad for steven grahem
It is a shocking film nothing like what it was like in Liverpool in early 80s..but its tranmere so good effort.one of the reasons I hated it was the green kagoules but different reason to you 9 out of 10 scallies ( Liverpool ..Everton footie lads wore them ) but they weren't Peter Storm kagoules which is what they wore..only found out few weeks ago Peter storm refused Awaydays film permission to use their green kagoules
@@angie-smart-but-casual They got the scarvers right. In 1979 the vast majority of hooligan firms were still bootboys. It wasn’t until 83 where you could definitively say that casual had fully taken over
@@angie-smart-but-casual Liverpool were casual in 1980 but it took a lot of other firms elsewhere in the country a while to catch on. But by 83, all firms were fully casual up and down the country.
@niallg3551 I don't know anyone that ever referred to it as 'casual' here (liverpool) it was a name coined by the southerners who still think they started it....if you know you know
if you cant use your hands lads dont use weapons and stay away from the game.
Against Modern Huliganism , no knives, no sticks and stones only fists !
Great film, even better soundtrack.
Prepubescent benny boys taking on battle hardened proper geezers and the aforementioned win. Yeah right 😂
The battle of Maze Hill 2002 would be a much more accurate description of the outcome in reality.
It’s cobblers it was never like that. Old bill were harder then than now. Rare to get on top of them . They were always out in force
To true.
Mistaken fella, the old bill were okish. Till they realized they had been taken the pi** out of them for years whenvtgeyvrelaisedxa shirt cost more than they earned in a month..west yorks and south Yorkshire with the transport police became like animals, oh how we laughed at the Old Bill 😂😂
1:41 when you and your boys see another school on a school trip
That one never gets old 😂
as the 1970s fade away the 1980s enter the arena, forget the low budget this was real as it was,
In 1979 i was at school aged 14 there was mods or grebs or normals but i do t remember seeing gangs of designer sportswear basin haircut yobs maybe we were a few years behind in derbyshire
About 10 years 😂
Most of my friend don't like this movie, but I think it's probably the best hooligan movia in terms of cinematography, style, character depth and soundtrack.
Soundtrack . A lot of people say music had nothing to do with footie culture bollo*s it was up north football, Attire trainers, bands indie music
The Best 👌
ID is the greatest hooligan movie
A great film
Went to the premiere of this film at the Phil in Liverpool, the book is even better.
the bloke in the brown coat never finishes his coffee
Funny every bank holiday we'd pile on the train from Leeds to Blackpool..barely saw a blackpool lad just remembering chasing wigan up and down 😂 the beach
North End lads will tell you the same tale. Walking round Blackpool all afternoon having to look for them.
Total and utter cowards .Real men fight life bring up children ..pay the bills look after their wives and partners and are there when the chips are down .Anybody can fight ..These guys were always cowards big men in a gang in a pub but quiet on their own .Brave men with Stanley knives
Exactly.
@Hustle Crowe but was shown no loyalty at the end scumbags
Complete opposite As I said the best were always highly outnumbered This film is only true to a point...weapons as a last resort Never be totally convinced by any movie...real is much better
You do know in real life most do have jobs bring home the bacon, look after their families. This is what they done to release stress blow off steam.
Amén…
The Light Pours Out Of Me - Magazine
Love this film... elvis is a struggling heroin addict who fancies carty sexually but being in the closet can never reveal his true feelings.
Pretty deep shit this
I put this edit together on my old RUclips account, it’s a very deep film still one of my favourites to this day!
Great movie. You've got a class flare of character from the characters.
Easily the best football firms film's infact it's the template of the ff no doubt KTF ✊🏻
So over the top
IN THE 70S AND 80S MILLWALL WAS THE TOP BOYS
Got badly mauled by WHU and Spurs...didn't fare any better at Bristol R so tell us how were they top boys you tit?
They had a reputation no doubt but couldn't bring the numbers like Man U, Liverpool, Leeds etc. As far as London clubs go WHU and Arsenal were just as active. Arsenal had some naughty fellas back in the day......
@@liberaldriller9884 These naughty fellas couldn't defend the NB against us, or the numerous hidings they took from Spurs...seen them all Jenkins, Miller, Denton etc...give credit where credit is due Gooners took it to WHU off plot on Hackney Rd...Millwall was all rep/hype
To everybody writing " Dont use weapons", This movie is supposed to take place in the 80-90s if Im not mistaken, and back then the hooliganscene was diffrent comparing to today. Just ask the old dudes that was fighting back then :)
Awesome movie!
It takes place in 1979, so just before 1980s.
Never seen this film but just seen some of the film looks great I’ll av to watch full film
these football movies are morally dubious, the makers of these movies will always claim they are anti violence, but when you look at the way the fights are set up, with thumping nostalgic songs playing and artistic camera work they are actually relishing in it. Thats fine if they would just admit they like making violent football hooligan movies, but when you see the directors being interviewed they will say they hate on screen Hollywood violence, and their movie is showing violence in a real way that will deter kids from it. What pretentious bollocks I know young people that watch these movies and say they love nothing but the violent scenes. Any anti violent moral to the stories just go over their heads. If your making a violent football movie that caters for fans of footie violence, with scenes off guys being nutted and slashed just admit that, don't go saying your movie is a deep thought provoking study of social values. ITS A GEEZER MOVIE FOR FANS OF NUTS MAGAZINE END OF...
+Bryan Partington Err...its morally dubious so you can make up your own mind. Your comment, and/or indeed any other comment, only reinforces that. That you comment on RUclips and this prompts a response from another, whether n agreement or disagreement means that the movie has an effect, and has value as a means of discourse. Making something which is didactic, that is, telling you what you should think is both childish and patronising. When someone told you that something was good. bad or whatever just because they told you that it was, didn't it annoy you?! This movie, far more than a lot of other football hooligan films actually makes a clear point that casual violence isn't glamorous - the protagonist and indeed Elvis too, are not simply sociopaths out for a good time - but like it or not, they represent people, real people, that like a lot of others of that period and today, that they sought, by themselves or collectively, to find ways to express their frustration at the world they inhabit. Perhaps a better question might be WHY is it that there are people that like to watch movies about violence, and indeed glamorise or participate in violence? These films are based on true events that demonstrate that our society (shock, horror) isn't so wonderful: so what then do we do? would you condemn those that feel frustrated by what our society offers them? or would you look at the reasons WHY society fails people to cause them to feel frustrated in the first place? Whatever your answer, you will have YOUR own social values, but you aren't society, you're just part of it, and society is the sum of its parts, whether good or bad. The discussion should and will continue.
No its just another cash in football film riding on the coat tails of football factory and that other pile off crap Green street. I work in an ordinary job with working class lads, and when they talk about these films, they don't come out with all this social commentary, they simply chat about the violence. Now I love violence in horror films and I grew up in the video nasty craze in the eighties, but I don't like films like this that dress themselves up as a statement on society, with some sort of important social message. When in fact they are just another direct to dvd football factory clone, with all the usual cliche characters, nostalgia music and Tarantino style slow mo walk towards the camera. A clockwork orange had something important to say, this however, like all the other football hooligan films that clog up the shelves doesn't. IMO.
Like the Western or the Mafia movie is to American cinema, the football hooligan movie is a classic genre of UK film making. It portrays a lifestyle, and yes its about the violence but only in the same way GTA is about the violence. You watch the movie but that's it. Yes it glorifies the violence but that doesn't turn somebody into a hooligan or make them want to slash someone who is from another town. The prime causes of making someone violent are the way they are socialised.
Paul Murray I never said it turns someone into a hooligan, tribalism in football does that already. However I disagree that football films are to the Brits what Westerns and Mafia movies are to American filmgoers. That genre of films isn't in the same league as those genres,but everyone has their own opinion.
I'm female don't read nuts, but love football but what amazes me is you always find some one making a big statement about hooligans and violence etc..I wonder how they stray on to things like this 🤔 what did you think it was beach volleyball or what were you really searching for and seen this and put your two pennywort in if it offends you don't watch don't let your kids watch end of !
Tommy was born to play the role of kids' pimp.
Great film
Carty reminded me of teddy sheringham
Class trainers..🎉
cowards, bringing boxcutters to a fight
U could say that but in the 70s hooligans had knives. There’s a pic of Scottish hooligans on Wembley swinging bike chains aswell.
A great day for fun back in the day, long story but though a Blackpool fan i once went to anfield with top lads sheff wed, crime squad and it was fkn crazy 80s, ended up in kemlyn Road stand 50 of us fighting scousers, spilled onto pitch, then in those days all plod did was escort you to your own end, obviously your mob went wild when they realised you'd been rowing in away end, great times.
You're hard
Anfield .. haha wrong mate the lads went in the Anfield Road End Anfield as seating while the Kop was still terracing and scarfies no point reading rest of tale you just go back to Narnia only time Blackpool had any fun was when Leeds turned up at bank Holidays.. no one has ever rated Wednesday as a firm.. Sheff Utd yes.. game as.. Me thinks you been watching Danny Dyer baa baa delete your comment..Bulls**t..Having to go with another team to Anfield cos your team is in Alliance and Premier League
Your Mob..You're Blackpool but did the Scousers with Wednesday..not your mob..your mates..if you are telling a tale get the punchlines right and the info ..you'll be telling us you had a Stone Island jacket on too haha Jackanory
@@angie-smart-but-casual that was another match then cos I was there with the 50 ocs in kemlyn road ,fighting like fkuk and no wed got sparked it ended up side of the pitch ,outside that stand till dibble escorted us to sheff wed end crazy days .
@@angie-smart-but-casual I met one of top ocs lads in prison for football violence ,and just met up for the odd match after FFS .
in my opinion this is the best of the hooligan films. Green street was fun but a little... unrealistic :p football factory is more comedy. Cass is very good, but awaydays is my favorite
Lol kids with box cutters belting full grown men is not realistic lol
@@MercyOnMe67 Actually it is, teenagers and early 20s lads can be vicious and uncontrollable. Being a fully grown man doesn’t mean you can’t be beat
The changing of the guard..the skins etc didnt just retire they were beaten into submission..people can learn a lot about these events how empires are won and lost..anyways most sensible people just step aside
Jafferbar and anybody else who thinks Tranmere is in Liverpool we are based on the Wirral therefore we are not scousers we are from Birkenhead! SWA
Had Liverpool lads mates back in the 80s got invited to Tranmere v Liverpool went on underground from lime Street one cold foggy Tuesday night good turn out used to go out in Greasby and Chelsea night club occasionally mated moved to wirral well his dad did well nice then
4.46 Background trak YOUNG SAVAGE ULTRAVOX
Makes me proud that my name is Paul Carty. I'm going fighting right now.
How did you get on carty?
@@Eireann. probably got filled in
Ronnie Pickering?
Put your hands together for..........Stanley
Great upload, too bad you didn't add the final scene. The film was a decent effort but not as great as the book, I guess they didn't have the budget. Not a big fan of the whole sexual tension between Carty & Elvis but like the overall atmosphere of the film.
One sided sexual tension, Carty didn’t feel the same, he was only into girls
What's the song at the beginning of this?
Forget me not's. As expected. Essex has no anvil to be hard.
Crazy but that is today
Hi mate. It's Ultravox - Dislocation
Useful Law Enforcement Police Officers.
6:50 "what the fuck are you looking at?!" hahahahaha!
i think a stanley blade
film at sutton uniteds ground surrey
0:36 they were the only lot on the train?
OI!!!OI!!!OI!!!damn right mate
Hooligans with scarves tied around their wrists? Bollocks
Was like that in the 70s, even into the early 80s for some firms. It was only around 83 where you could say casual had fully taken over.
Anyone who thinks this is a great film sorry to burst your bubble it means you weren't around in 1980 ..yes it's tranmere and it's saving grace is Peter storm refused permission to use their Infamous green jacket
No one would ever get away with this shit now. They found that out in Europe.
Titolo del film grazie
to be fair who watched the then went and got a wedge haircut
😂😂😂😂😂
i just watched this film and thought it was really good, i grew up in this area ie new ferry eastham etc ...BUT when i looked at the cast list i thought WTF...its full of manx actors trying to play mereysiders...emmmm WHY? its like having a german play churchill in a war film...i know most manxs want to be scouse but this film is taking the pi**
theirs like one manc actor init
go on wiki and view the cast list....there is at least 10 Manchester actors in it...don't get me wrong they are very good but why use Manchester actors to play scousers?
haha ah yeah their is a few they seem to do the same with manchester based programs apart from shameless corrie is menna be manchester theirs about 1 manc accent init
First off, it's mancs not manx . Manx people are from the isle of man. Second, these are not Scousers, or merseysiders, Tranmere is in Prenton, on the Wirral, CH postcode. They don't have Scouse accents anyway.
@@paulmckernan7518I know that mike and a half makes all the difference in how people sound 😅 not Scouse aswell .. thankfully more interlect than attitude 👍
these boys fight like MEN...
Yeah using knives in a fight is fighting like 'MEN'.
Wais In reality people don't care whether they fight fair or dirty
ThorirEy I would
Wais you'd get your ass handed to you in a matter of seconds then. fighting is all about taking advantages of situations
Wais You can't always rely on your opponents fighting fairly. What if one of them brings a knife? Fights are about surviving, not winning with honour. Take what you can to the fight and hope for the best.
Name of the song in 1:45?
Magazine - The Light Pours Out of Me
In case you still want to know
This video was indicated by the algorithm because I was searching about "This is England" but the movie above looks like stupid comparing with "This is England".
NO FACE, NO NAME, ULTRAS WILL NEVER DIE
ABALAEA CLUB PAOK SINCE 1993
Ah, the Ultras, the Julian Clareys of football gangs
Ultras are wannabee casuals you'd think all the countries Italy etc with the clothing and they wear Fred Perry haha watched the film ultras 2020 crying by 8 mins in different planet
@@davidwagstaff47 have you seen the latest film ultras ffs 8 mins crying in embarrassment
class
what song is is at 1 36
6:08 music name?
the best films from merseyside are BLOOD ON THE DOLE AND ONE SUMMER
What teams do they fight against?
From memory so could be wrong here, the first scene is Halifax and the second is Wrexham. The last scene is not a firm.
off the hook. old school gang and new movies are best but brits are the king of the thuggin sht.
6:50 'what the fuck are you looking at' ahahhaha
Yes Runcorn bridge
what did he cut him with?
his mate stanley
baby millan is the best!
Sunderland and Sheffield
Been about both these places and got loads of boys, Sheffield a real fighting city though, and there rivalry second to none, i hung out with ocs for a short while, crime squad sheff wed, wild Times they did need match days to go smash each others pubs up, it was naughty.
No wonder the world's in a mess glorifying the behavour of a total psychopath.. yep, football is fun, edgy and often dangerous, but ripping another human to bits with a stanley knife???
Kicks the shit out of him doesn't he! Haha.
oh and P.S. at 6:50 i lolled :D
00:04 song please?
Dodicesimo trentatre mmiyabi
Elvis and the guy who got him in the firm definitely had some serious sexual tension. Always talking about running away together hell just right here in that scene "we'll go through these queers easy" "love it when they say that" sounded like he was aroused rather than acting tough. Good movie to poke fun at get hella stoned to n just crack jokes about those two lovers.
Lol did you watch the whole film? Carty wasn’t in love with Elvis, he was only into girls and he even told Elvis he couldn’t go with him in that way.
As for Elvis saying that to the other firm, it’s cos he knew his firm were about to annihilate the other lot, so he enjoyed hearing them thinking that him and the pack were easy, knowing full well that the other firm were in for a brutal kicking
Any one fancies the book.you can have it...just inbox me....got stacks of them..........now jog on.
Yeah right
They're, not their.
Tragedy!
06:50 What the Fuck are you looking at! Ha Ha
the film would be better if it was 40v40 but still its a good film
fierce tough usin the knives lads.yeah real tough that.glasgow rangers or hearts rejects maybe.
its a film mate. it's just acting...
+Jack Dempsey What's wrong with the idiots who comment on these clips..?? There are NO Scousers involved in these scenes..!!
i think sunderland and Manchester
Polette Ramirez 🖒🖒
So you weren't involved in 1980 and only have rubbish film makers or wannabees churning out books with claims of this and that..decent tunes though but my 7 year old could have put a better sound track together FACT
hahaha thats well funny
The firms weren't this young in 80s slightly older, and as with Blackpool fc, we had 3 firms one was mainly young uns, did there thing, bisons riot squad, but this brings back memories us away in Bolton boxing day 80s did em on mancs Road 11am in the morning, then in the ground, no shit one of our main lads Tom troup broke into the home end segregation gate and no shit, they ran away scattered in there own end we piled in fkn great, and after the game we was at it, parked up on one of there estates before the game, when we went back they realised an hire van was from bpool and 100 of us against 100s of them most of us got sore faces and got to admit the cops coming saved us that day, also Bolton let tyres down on most of our motors, cops weren't amused having to hang around lol.
Wirral is scouse lad
As if
It's not thankfully
This film looks terrible! Glad that wasn't s proper rugby pub they walked into at the end...
Magazine
shocking film really. no originality, wearing them stupid green jackets so they all look like their part of a dogging crew. Just not at all genuine. Its like a school trip the fight scenes, feel bad for steven grahem
It is a shocking film nothing like what it was like in Liverpool in early 80s..but its tranmere so good effort.one of the reasons I hated it was the green kagoules but different reason to you 9 out of 10 scallies ( Liverpool ..Everton footie lads wore them ) but they weren't Peter Storm kagoules which is what they wore..only found out few weeks ago Peter storm refused Awaydays film permission to use their green kagoules
@@angie-smart-but-casual They got the scarvers right. In 1979 the vast majority of hooligan firms were still bootboys. It wasn’t until 83 where you could definitively say that casual had fully taken over
@@niallg3551 1980 sorry
@@angie-smart-but-casual Liverpool were casual in 1980 but it took a lot of other firms elsewhere in the country a while to catch on. But by 83, all firms were fully casual up and down the country.
@niallg3551 I don't know anyone that ever referred to it as 'casual' here (liverpool) it was a name coined by the southerners who still think they started it....if you know you know
Is one of them the one who play combo in this is England look at him the guy who slap other guy on the head
Ahaha
dose no1 under stand THIS IS FAKE
Movies for chavs
total bollocks