/p9hCMDREAEkxlYye7ZNWuxkePba.jpg
DramaComedy

Eleven Men Out

- The beautiful game just got prettier

The star player of Icelands top football team causes a stir when he admits to being gay to his team mates and then goes on a journey to discover himself (with the help of the local press). He soon finds himself on the bench for most of his teams matches and decides to call it quits and join a small amateur team made up of men like himself - gay guys trying to play football in a straight world of Icelandic fishing culture machoism

Release Date : 2005-09-02

Language :Icelandic

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Film Douglas & LiSolar FilmsKvikmyndafélag ÍslandsFilm and Music EntertainmentInvicta Capital

Production Country : FinlandIcelandUnited Kingdom

Alternative Titles : Eleven Men OutStrákarnir okkar

Cast

Björn Hlynur Haraldsson

Character Name : Ottar Thor

Original Name : Björn Hlynur Haraldsson

Gender : Male

Lilja Nótt Þórarinsdóttir

Character Name : Gugga

Original Name : Lilja Nótt Þórarinsdóttir

Gender : Female

Arnmundur Ernst Björnsson

Character Name : Magnus

Original Name : Arnmundur Ernst Björnsson

Gender : Male

Helgi Björnsson

Character Name : Pétur

Original Name : Helgi Björnsson

Gender : Male

Þorsteinn Bachmann

Character Name : Georg

Original Name : Þorsteinn Bachmann

Gender : Male

Sigurður Skúlason

Character Name : Eirikur

Original Name : Sigurður Skúlason

Gender : Male

Damon Younger

Character Name : Brósi

Original Name : Damon Younger

Gender : Male

Marius Sverrisson

Character Name : Starri

Original Name : Marius Sverrisson

Gender : Male

Hilmar Jónsson

Character Name : Viktor Ingi

Original Name : Hilmar Jónsson

Gender : Male

Pétur Einarsson

Character Name : Björgvin

Original Name : Pétur Einarsson

Gender : Male

Felix Bergsson

Character Name : Domari

Original Name : Felix Bergsson

Gender : Male

Erlendur Eiríksson

Character Name : Alfred

Original Name : Erlendur Eiríksson

Gender : Male

Reviews

B

bobbeijing

@bobbeijing

2021-06-23

Ottar Thor (Bjorn Hlynur Haraldsson) is the handsome, arrogant star player of a pro soccer team, as well as main breadwinner for a family in which the overbearing males seem to spend most of their time telling long-suffering wives to shaddap. Ottar is divorced from his spouse, a former Miss Iceland (Lilja Nott as Gugga) turned full-time alcoholic. They share custody of adolescent son Magnus (Arnmundur Ernst), who buries himself in videogames. Ottar doesn’t think about the repercussions when he decides to tell a journalist — in the locker room after a game — that he’s gay. His motivation is no loftier than securing a magazine cover for himself. But teammates, the conservative owners, and everyone else immediately freak out. Ottar finds himself banned from play, and for lack of anything else to do, joins a friend’s amateur league team, which already has a couple of gay guys on board. Soon more show up — drawn by the protag’s notoriety — as hetero players flee. Reconstituted squad’s league status skyrockets, even if its winning streak is largely a matter of forfeits by rivals who refuse to play the “queers.” Meanwhile, Ottar’s former team is suffering a publicity backlash from having kicked him out. They want him back — even if they’re still nowhere near to accepting “the gay thing.” Things culminate in a farfetched but agreeable showcase match between amateurs and pros, which just happens to be scheduled on Gay Pride Day. A similarly acerbic but not unkind humor pervades the story’s other threads. Ottar’s parenting skills are fairly lousy, but he does care, as does the generally hapless Gugga. Magga’s rising hostility turns out to be based not in homophobia, but in the fact that no 13-year-old is thick-skinned enough to welcome a parent’s coming out in the national media. When Ottar tries to settle down into his new lifestyle by going steady with a teammate, the effort flops — because he chooses a partner even more shallow than he. Subsidiary characters — notably, the hero’s incredibly obnoxious father (Sigurdur Skulason) and brother (co-scenarist Jon Atli Jonasson — have no redemptive qualities, but make up in sheer hilarity whatever they lack in psychological nuance. Perfs are perfectly in tune with the director’s deadpan yet boisterous tone. Design contribs hit the right gritty but polished note, while the tech package is first-rate.