Quote: dboy "It's a dead end story of desperation, futility, of being a pawn, of class of have's and have not's.
Whatever Machin did, his future was written. I don't think we were ever meant to like him.
It is not meant to represent Rugby League or Wakefield Trinity, but the bleak life of a worthless man (trying to use sport to break those chains), in a Northern industrial town.
It's a black film, meant to portray black times. This it does (to standards recognised by the Academy Awards nominations).
It seems it's not jolly/uplifting/Hollywoodised enough for some on here...but if it was, it wouldn't be "This Sporting Life".'"
It does this brilliantly for me with Harris perfectly suited with the brooding intensity he brings to the part he plays.