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Green Street (also known as Green Street Hooligans [3] and Hooligans [4]) is a 2005 crime drama film about football hooliganism in the United Kingdom. [3] The film was directed by Lexi Alexander and stars Elijah Wood and Charlie Hunnam. Two sequels followed in the form of direct-to-video releases.
Joey Ansah (who plays Victor), with assistance by Christian Howard (who co-stars as GSE member Wedge), trained the film's cast and fighters for the film's action sequences. The original title for the film when shooting began was Green Street Hooligans: Underground. However, upon its local release, the film was re-titled Green Street 3: Never ...
Green Street, a 2005 independent drama film about football hooliganism in England Green Street 2: Stand Your Ground, a 2009 crime drama film; Green Street 3: Never Back Down, a 2013 action drama film; Green Street, a 1961 jazz album by Grant Green
Green Street 2 was filmed in around mid-2008 on a $1,000,000 budget, considerably lower than the film's predecessor. None of the original cast from Green Street returned except for Ross McCall, who reprised his role as Dave, and Terence Jay, who played a different character. The film was released straight-to-video in March 2009. [1]
Sydney Hughes Greenstreet was born on December 27, 1879, in Eastry, Kent, [1] the son of Ann (née Baker) and John Jarvis Greenstreet, a tanner.He had seven siblings. He left home at the age of 18 to make his fortune as a Ceylon tea planter, but drought forced him out of business.
Green Dolphin Street is a 1947 American historical drama disaster film directed by Victor Saville and starring Lana Turner, Van Heflin, and Donna Reed. It was produced by Carey Wilson . Based on the 1944 novel Green Dolphin Street by Elizabeth Goudge , it was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer .
The Verdict is a 1946 American film noir mystery drama film directed by Don Siegel and written by Peter Milne, loosely based on Israel Zangwill's 1892 novel The Big Bow Mystery. It stars Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre in one of their nine film pairings, as well as Joan Lorring and George Coulouris. The Verdict was Siegel's first full-length ...
Green Zone is seen as a political film, [38] [39] portraying the CIA in Iraq as the good guys while the Pentagon, more generally, the White House, as the bad guys. [40] Film critic A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times that "the inevitable huffing and puffing about this movie's supposedly left-wing or 'anti-American' agenda has already begun ...