N.B. In no particular order
1. Maradona in Mexico
Director: Angus Macqueen
Premise: An intimate look at the year Argentine football legend Diego Maradona spent as manager of Mexican side Dorados de Sinaloa.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: n/a
Sample review: “These films explore real-life Diego: fervent, complex, charming, impassioned, sentimental and endearingly unhinged. For someone – which I am – who watched Maradona every other Sunday in Naples for two years, drop-jawed, it’s this footage from Mexico that achieves riveting insight, eyeball-to-eyeball.” – The Guardian.
2. The Fighter
Director: David O Russell
Premise: The story of ‘Irish’ Micky Ward, a junior welterweight champion, with the film documenting his remarkable rise in spite of a turbulent life away from the ring.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 91%
Sample review: “The Fighter is, if not a champion film for all time, a very good, poignant, and commendable expression of its era-postindustrial working-class urban America, bereft of history as it is bereft of jobs, strong unions, pride in one’s work.” The New York Review of Books
3. Icarus
Director: Bryan Fogel
Premise: A documentary on how easy it is to break anti-doping rules in cycling suddenly becomes a far bigger story, involving an alleged systematic doping programme in Russia.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 94%
Sample review: ”If you want insight into cheating in sports and the complicated reasons why it happens over and over, Icarus will open your eyes as never before. It is essential viewing for anyone interested in athletics or competitive sports of any type.” The Globe and Mail
4. High Flying Bird
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Premise: A drama based on the 2011 NBA lockout, portraying the figures on both sides attempting to solve this sporting crisis and highlighting the long-term impact the saga has had on professional basketball.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 93%
Sample review: “The actors here, particularly Holland, speak with a relish Soderbergh usually saves for his heist capers. And though much lighter on the action, High Flying Bird still has the pace and feel of one.” Vanity Fair
5. Katie
Director: Ross Whitaker
Premise: A captivating look at the rise of the young Taylor who emerged from an era in which women’s boxing was banned in Ireland, as she defied sexist attitudes along the way and ultimately becoming a sporting icon.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 100%
Sample review: “Buffed with stirring fight sequences, the picture stands as a polite argument for the greatness of a figure almost everyone already loves.” Irish Times
6. Moneyball
Director: Bennett Miller
Premise: A well-executed adaptation of Michael Lewis’ non-fiction best seller, the story of how the general manager of the Oakland Athletics turned a struggling side with a lack of resources into a revolutionary baseball team.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 94%
Sample review: “Consistently exciting and highly intelligent, as you might expect from a script by Steve Zaillian, who wrote Schindler’s List, and Aaron Sorkin, who created The West Wing and won an Oscar for The Social Network.” The Observer
7. Sunderland ‘Til I Die
Director: Various
Premise: A comprehensive and insightful multi-part documentary looking at Sunderland’s ill-fated 2017-18 season, highlighting how the club’s campaign began with heady optimism and soon turned gloomy, while documenting the people affected along the way.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 100%
Sample review: “Maybe the best thing ‘Til I Die does is center the experience of people who love a club whose modern history has been largely defined by crisis, dysfunction, and imminent misery.” The Ringer
8. Rush
Director: Ron Howard