I Believe in Miracles

I Believe in Miracles

2015104 min
6.8/10
Documentary

Plot Summary

Documentary following the history making Nottingham Forest football team led by Brian Clough and Peter Taylor that won back to back European cups.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (24)

Brian Clough

Brian Clough

Himself (Archive Material)

Peter Taylor

Peter Taylor

Himself (Archive Material)

No Image

Jimmy Gordon

Himself (Archive Material)

John McGovern

John McGovern

Himself

Peter Shilton

Peter Shilton

Himself

Viv Anderson

Viv Anderson

Himself

John Robertson

John Robertson

Himself

Garry Birtles

Garry Birtles

Himself

Trevor Francis

Trevor Francis

Himself

No Image

Larry Lloyd

Himself

Martin O'Neill

Martin O'Neill

Himself

No Image

Colin Barrett

Himself

🎬Crew

Director

Jonny Owen

Writers

Jonny Owen

Producers

Henry Normal, Penny Chettle, Craig Chettle, Jonny Owen

🖼️Gallery (3 images)

I Believe in Miracles backdrop 1
I Believe in Miracles backdrop 2
I Believe in Miracles backdrop 3

🏷️Keywords

sportsbiographyfootball (soccer)

💬Reviews (1)

J

John Chard

1/8/2016

Brian Clough - O.B.E. - Old Big Ed - Legend. To football fans in the United Kingdom, the name Brian Clough needs no introduction or building up. Thanks to the release of The Damned United in 2009 his name got noticed outside of Britain, I Believe in Miracles is the perfect follow up to that movie, a sort of explanation as to why there has been a film and documentary about the man and his charges. Director Jonny Owen assembles members of the great Nottingham Forest (always Notingham, never Notts) side of the late 1970s, interviews the key players and gets brilliant anecdotes out of them. Concurrently he offers up archive footage and a bitch funky period musical score. Clough is the leader, whose mantra is not one of assembling super stars, but of actually putting a team of men together and asking them to work hard, believe in themselves and be all that they can be. This is not Hollywood, every inch of this doc is true, no artistic licence here. The team is a mixture of smokers and jokers, drinkers and jinkers, cloggers and sloggers all responding to Clough's (and his equally important side-kick Peter Taylor) less than normal football training and management methods. Everything here goes against the grain of today's football managers, I mean what manager today would run his men through nettles and then go for a pint with them afterwards?! Players smoking at half time, surely not? Wonderful. This is a true underdog story, a film for footie fans to rejoice in - regardless of who any of us in our tribal leanings support in British football. 9/10

Read full review →

Production Companies

Baby Cow Productions