Goal The Dream Begins 2005 — Fast & Proven
“Dame más.” (Give me more.) – Santiago Muñez Goal! The Dream Begins is available to stream on [platforms vary by region]. The 20th anniversary restoration is rumored for a 2025 release.
In the canon of sports cinema, the shelf is stacked with American heavyweights. Rocky . Hoosiers . Any Given Sunday . These are stories of gladiators in cleats or shoulder pads, built on the familiar architecture of the underdog’s ascent. But in 2005, a British-American co-production dared to ask a question that Hollywood had long fumbled: can you make a great film about the world’s most popular sport without making it cringe?
A minor masterpiece of sports sentimentality. Essential viewing for any football fan—and a surprisingly effective tearjerker for everyone else. Goal The Dream Begins 2005
But that’s precisely why we return to it. On a rainy Sunday afternoon, when the real football feels too cynical, Goal! offers a balm. It reminds us why we fell in love with the game in the first place: the dream that a kid with nothing but talent and heart can, against all odds, run out onto the pitch and change his life.
The answer, surprisingly, was yes. And its name was Goal! The Dream Begins . Directed by Danny Cannon and written by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais (the legendary duo behind The Commitments and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet ), the film follows Santiago Muñez (Kuno Becker), a young Mexican immigrant living in the gritty barrios of Los Angeles. By day, he works a grueling landscaping job alongside his bitter, once-promising footballer father (Jorge Cervantes). By night, he plays pick-up football with a raw, unpolished talent that catches the eye of a disillusioned ex-pat scout, Glen Foy (Stephen Dillane). “Dame más
The film made a then-groundbreaking deal with FIFA and the Premier League. That means no fake CGI corners, no impossible physics. When Santiago curls a free-kick into the top bin, it’s actor Kuno Becker—who trained obsessively with former Real Madrid star Zinedine Zidane—actually performing the technique. The climactic match against Liverpool uses real Newcastle players (Alan Shearer, Shay Given) and genuine stadium footage. The result is visceral. You feel the thud of the tackle.
In 2005, a small, unassuming football film dribbled past expectations and into the hearts of fans worldwide. Twenty years on, Goal! The Dream Begins remains a cultural anomaly—a sports movie that actually got football right. In the canon of sports cinema, the shelf
Foy’s pitch is simple: come to London. Try out for Newcastle United. The rest, as they say, is history—but a history filled with very modern obstacles. Santiago arrives in a freezing, unwelcoming England with no money, no connections, and a secret: he suffers from exercise-induced asthma.
The third film, Goal III: Taking on the World (2009), was a direct-to-DVD disaster that followed secondary characters during the 2006 World Cup. Kuno Becker appears only briefly. It is best forgotten.