Tigers review – teen football star quits Inter Milan in real-life mental health drama

Fictionalised account of Martin Bengtsson, who quit after struggling with suicidal thoughts, can’t decide if the problem is with the footballing system or not

This oddly unsatisfying and misfiring sports drama was Sweden’s Oscar submission last year; it fictionalises the real-life case of teen Swedish footballing prodigy Martin Bengtsson who was on the verge of the big time when he signed for Inter Milan in 2003, but quit soon afterwards, suffering from depression and suicidal thoughts. He was put under the extraordinary pressure of being treated like a kid at the club’s youth academy, yet showered with the kind of money that buys sports cars while being subject to the needling suspicion that he could get dropped at any time.

Erik Enge plays Bengtsson, Alfred Enoch plays his friend Ryan and Frida Gustavsson plays his model girlfriend Vibeke; writer-director Ronnie Sandahl (who scripted Borg McEnroe in 2017) can’t quite decide if the problem is with the footballing system generally or with Bengtsson himself as someone with his own mental health vulnerabilities. We get scenes with Bengtsson out clubbing with his mercurial, jealous teammates – though he is shyly and watchfully apart from the real bad behaviour.

There are training scenes, matchplay scenes, and plenty of long, slightly redundant closeups of Bengtsson’s stricken face, conveying … what, exactly? The film contains moments in which we are invited to assume that Bengtsson has issues with self-harm, and with food and OCD tendencies, but Sandahl seems also to want to take the emphasis away from this kind of purely personal diagnosis, and to talk about the dysfunctional world of elite sports. Yet even on this point, the film doesn’t quite go in for the kill. The climactic crisis itself, a much more indirect and ambiguous drama than that which appears to have been the case in real life, feels like a rather melodramatic fudge.

This is a laborious movie whose final intertitles rather superciliously assure us that Inter Milan has made greater advances than other European clubs on protecting its young players’ mental health. That claim is as cloudy as everything else.

• Tigers is released on 1 July in cinemas.


Contributor

Peter Bradshaw

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
I Am Zlatan review – compelling insight into the making of a football superstar
Jens Sjögren’s sympathetic film avoids the cliched sport movie formula of triumph over adversity by focusing on what happens off the pitch

Cath Clarke

01, Jun, 2022 @8:00 AM

Article image
Pleasure review – porn industry drama explores complex questions of consent
Sofia Kappel is striking as a young Swedish actor taking her first steps into the adult film industry, where power relations are the same as they ever were

Peter Bradshaw

15, Jun, 2022 @10:00 AM

Article image
Are We Lost Forever review – breakup drama runs out of steam, if not sex
This Swedish relationship drama starts promisingly, but the script is too soapy and laboured

Phil Hoad

18, Jan, 2021 @5:00 PM

Article image
Bad Tales review – suburban dysfunction in visceral Italian drama
Superbly shot, the D’Innocenzo brothers’ film focuses on families, neighbourly envy and the feral behaviour of men which culminates in tragedy

Peter Bradshaw

16, Feb, 2021 @11:00 AM

Article image
Slalom review – abuse on the slopes in tense teen ski prodigy drama | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
A French teen ski champion navigates sexual exploitation by her male coach in Charlène Favier’s difficult but impressive debut

Peter Bradshaw

09, Feb, 2021 @1:00 PM

Article image
Breakthrough review – dreary real-life 'resurrection' drama
A teenager declared dead after falling through the ice is miraculously brought back to life in this undistinguished faith-based tale

Mike McCahill

17, May, 2019 @10:00 AM

Article image
Stop-Zemlia review – tender Ukraine teen drama is unbearably poignant
Director Kateryna Gornostai’s documentary-like film, originally released in 2021, has assumed a heartbreaking new significance since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Cath Clarke

20, Feb, 2023 @7:00 AM

Article image
Amanda review – comic crises in the life of an entitled twentysomething
Venice film festival: A wealthy young woman, friendless and lost after studying abroad, sets about recovering an old friendship she thinks she once had

Peter Bradshaw

05, Sep, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
Hilma review – Sweden’s mystical outsider artist gets feelgood biopic
Film candyman Lasse Hallström has delivered a cloying but well performed version of the life of Swedish painter Hilma af Klint

Cath Clarke

25, Oct, 2022 @10:00 AM

Article image
Cries and Whispers review – Ingmar Bergman’s diabolically inspired claustrophobic horror
Bergman’s 1972 film is rereleased, the story of sisters waiting for one to die, and it shocks and disturbs in equal measure

Peter Bradshaw

31, Mar, 2022 @10:00 AM