• Latest
  • Trending
Saipan Review

Saipan Review: Two Irelands Collide on a Football Pitch

Milovník, Nie Bojovník Review

Lover, Not a Fighter Review: Waiting for Adulthood to Load

The Apartment Job Review (

The Apartment Job Review: Crime Comes to the Residents’ Association

Backyard Baseball Review

Backyard Baseball Review: Familiar Faces, Uneven Fundamentals

Miguel Ángel Blanco: The 48 Hours That Changed Spain Review

Miguel Ángel Blanco: The 48 Hours That Changed Spain Review: Hope Against the Clock

Mockbuster Review

Mockbuster Review: Six Days to Make a Dinosaur Movie

The Odyssey Review

The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

The Isolate Thief Review

The Isolate Thief Review: Blood Freezes at the Outpost

Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review

Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review: A Cruise Holiday Turns Into a Death Trap

The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review

The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review: Never Trust the Treasure Pedestal

Hot Girl Summer Review

Hot Girl Summer Review: Desire Steps Into the Sunlight

Thunder 3 Review

Thunder 3 Review: Netflix Lets the Weird One Through

Try! Review

Try! Review: No Player Left Behind

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Friday, July 17, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    George Lucas

    George Lucas Compares Rejecting AI to Rejecting Cars, Sparking Fan Backlash

    Colin From Accounts

    ‘Colin From Accounts’ to End With Season 3

    Tom Cruise

    Tom Cruise to Make Special Appearance at World Cup Closing Ceremony

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Fans Rearrange Their Lives to See ‘The Odyssey’ in 70mm Imax

    Paramount Skydance

    Paramount Agrees to Merge Antitrust Case With Subscriber Lawsuit

    Andy Serkis

    Andy Serkis Returns as Gollum in First ‘Hunt for Gollum’ Set Footage

    Scott Bryce

    Scott Bryce, ‘As the World Turns’ Star Who Played Craig Montgomery, Dies at 68

    Summer House Season 11

    ‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

    David Zaslav

    David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Milovník, Nie Bojovník Review

    Lover, Not a Fighter Review: Waiting for Adulthood to Load

    The Apartment Job Review (

    The Apartment Job Review: Crime Comes to the Residents’ Association

    Miguel Ángel Blanco: The 48 Hours That Changed Spain Review

    Miguel Ángel Blanco: The 48 Hours That Changed Spain Review: Hope Against the Clock

    Mockbuster Review

    Mockbuster Review: Six Days to Make a Dinosaur Movie

    The Odyssey Review

    The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

    The Isolate Thief Review

    The Isolate Thief Review: Blood Freezes at the Outpost

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review: A Cruise Holiday Turns Into a Death Trap

    Hot Girl Summer Review

    Hot Girl Summer Review: Desire Steps Into the Sunlight

    Thunder 3 Review

    Thunder 3 Review: Netflix Lets the Weird One Through

  • Game Reviews
    Backyard Baseball Review

    Backyard Baseball Review: Familiar Faces, Uneven Fundamentals

    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review

    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review: Never Trust the Treasure Pedestal

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review: Quill Escapes the Headset

    The Alters: Last Variable Review

    The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

    Cat Mail Co. Review

    Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

    We Gotta Go Review

    We Gotta Go Review: Toilet Panic Needs Stronger Systems

    Ascend to ZERO Review

    Ascend to ZERO Review: Every Second Becomes a Weapon

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review: The Slayer Learns to Fly Again

    Moldwasher Review

    Moldwasher Review: Pixel Grime Meets Lo-Fi Calm

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    George Lucas

    George Lucas Compares Rejecting AI to Rejecting Cars, Sparking Fan Backlash

    Colin From Accounts

    ‘Colin From Accounts’ to End With Season 3

    Tom Cruise

    Tom Cruise to Make Special Appearance at World Cup Closing Ceremony

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Fans Rearrange Their Lives to See ‘The Odyssey’ in 70mm Imax

    Paramount Skydance

    Paramount Agrees to Merge Antitrust Case With Subscriber Lawsuit

    Andy Serkis

    Andy Serkis Returns as Gollum in First ‘Hunt for Gollum’ Set Footage

    Scott Bryce

    Scott Bryce, ‘As the World Turns’ Star Who Played Craig Montgomery, Dies at 68

    Summer House Season 11

    ‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

    David Zaslav

    David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Milovník, Nie Bojovník Review

    Lover, Not a Fighter Review: Waiting for Adulthood to Load

    The Apartment Job Review (

    The Apartment Job Review: Crime Comes to the Residents’ Association

    Miguel Ángel Blanco: The 48 Hours That Changed Spain Review

    Miguel Ángel Blanco: The 48 Hours That Changed Spain Review: Hope Against the Clock

    Mockbuster Review

    Mockbuster Review: Six Days to Make a Dinosaur Movie

    The Odyssey Review

    The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

    The Isolate Thief Review

    The Isolate Thief Review: Blood Freezes at the Outpost

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review: A Cruise Holiday Turns Into a Death Trap

    Hot Girl Summer Review

    Hot Girl Summer Review: Desire Steps Into the Sunlight

    Thunder 3 Review

    Thunder 3 Review: Netflix Lets the Weird One Through

  • Game Reviews
    Backyard Baseball Review

    Backyard Baseball Review: Familiar Faces, Uneven Fundamentals

    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review

    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review: Never Trust the Treasure Pedestal

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review: Quill Escapes the Headset

    The Alters: Last Variable Review

    The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

    Cat Mail Co. Review

    Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

    We Gotta Go Review

    We Gotta Go Review: Toilet Panic Needs Stronger Systems

    Ascend to ZERO Review

    Ascend to ZERO Review: Every Second Becomes a Weapon

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review: The Slayer Learns to Fly Again

    Moldwasher Review

    Moldwasher Review: Pixel Grime Meets Lo-Fi Calm

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Saipan Review

John Candy: I Like Me Review: Celebrating an Icon, Guarding a Man

The Echoes of Survivors: Inside Korea’s Tragedies Review: Vital Stories, Vexing Choices

Home Entertainment

Saipan Review: Two Irelands Collide on a Football Pitch

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
10 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

Great national dramas often find their stage in the most unlikely of venues. Saipan revisits one such episode, a moment when the destiny of Irish football was debated not on a hallowed pitch, but in the humid, dilapidated setting of a Pacific island. The film captures the Republic of Ireland in 2002, a nation buoyant with hope on the eve of the World Cup.

At the center of this hope are two figures locked in a fragile truce: the team’s pragmatic manager, Mick McCarthy, and its star player, Roy Keane, a man who treated the sport with monastic severity. McCarthy’s decision to move the team’s training camp to Saipan, ostensibly to acclimate the players to Asian weather, proves to be the spark in a powder keg.

What unfolds is less a story about sport and more a high-stakes psychological standoff, a bitter clash of personalities fueled by pride and wildly divergent professional standards.

An Irresistible Force Meets a Movable Object

The film’s power resides almost entirely in its two central performances, a study in opposition. Éanna Hardwicke’s Roy Keane is a figure of searing, righteous intensity. His anger is not petulance; it is the logical reaction of a purist whose identity is wholly fused with his professional code. For him, an insult to the standard of preparation is an existential threat. Hardwicke’s coiled physicality, a portrait of constant tension, makes this clear before he even speaks.

The film expertly frames his frustration as an understandable response to systemic amateurism, from a crumbling hotel to a training pitch more suitable for grazing goats than for elite athletes (who were, for a time, without footballs). Hardwicke finds the profound, almost tragic, isolation within Keane’s fury, showing a man whose singular commitment makes him an exile among his more relaxed teammates. He makes the player’s legendary intransigence feel less like a flaw and more like a sympathetic, if destructive, virtue.

Against this force, Steve Coogan offers a subtle, reactive portrait of Mick McCarthy. His performance is a masterclass in quiet desperation. Coogan’s McCarthy is a fundamentally decent man, a pragmatist whose primary tool is placation, a style of leadership completely mismatched for the uncompromising modernity Keane represents.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best sci fi movies
    30 Best Sci Fi Movies Ever: Gazettely's Ultimate…
  • Best Horror Movies
    30 Best Horror Movies: The Horror Hall of Fame
  • 30 Best Drama Movies
    30 Best Drama Movies to Watch Before You Die
  • Saipan Steve Coogan
    Steve Coogan’s Saipan reignites the Roy Keane–Mick…

His every facial expression conveys a man running frantic mental calculations to find the right words to defuse an impossible situation. With a hesitant posture and an almost apologetic air, Coogan shows us a manager painfully aware that he is out of his depth, trying to reason with a hurricane. McCarthy’s goal is functional morale, a sharp contrast to Keane’s singular, agonizing pursuit of victory at any cost.

A Fever Dream in Archival Footage

Directors Lisa Barros D’Sa and Glenn Leyburn construct the film’s atmosphere with remarkable skill. They weave in archival news clips and frantic radio reports from 2002, a technique that does more than provide context. It creates a documented reality that envelops the fictionalized scenes, making the private arguments feel like stolen moments happening just beyond the camera flashes.

The editing reflects the protagonist’s agitated mind, with quick, jarring cuts that ratchet up the sense of impending collapse, mirroring a nervous system fraying in real time. The story’s tension is amplified by its claustrophobic settings. Key arguments unfold not in boardrooms but in the cramped confines of an airplane toilet and a sweltering hotel sauna.

These are not just rooms; they are pressure cookers that strip away public personas, leaving only raw ego and conflict. This directorial choice gives the film a tone that oscillates brilliantly between a tense thriller and a dark comedy of errors.

The humor is derived from the absurdly small catalysts (like the quality of sandwiches) for such a monumental fallout. It is a symptom of the situation’s profound absurdity, underscored by a cool indie-rock soundtrack that feels jarringly modern against the very uncool, bureaucratic mess on screen.

An Allegory of Irish Modernity

The film’s scope extends beyond the football pitch, functioning as a sharp workplace drama about the eternal war between the idealist and the manager. Keane is the disruptive visionary, impossible to manage but essential for progress, while McCarthy is the beleaguered executive tasked with keeping the project on schedule, even if it means sacrificing true quality.

Saipan Review

The stubborn pride on display, the catastrophic inability of two men to find an inch of common ground, makes for a potent tragedy of masculine ego. Yet the story also serves as a fascinating examination of Irish national identity at a turning point. The conflict can be read as a clash between two Irelands. Keane, the intense Corkman, embodies a more assertive, post-Celtic Tiger confidence that refuses to be seen as second-rate.

He displays an open disdain for the performative, happy-go-lucky Irish stereotype he sees in the lax atmosphere of the camp. The film thus presents a central conflict not just between two men, but between two competing ideas of what it means to be Irish on the world stage, a potent look at the difficult, often destructive, path required to achieve excellence in a world that prefers comfortable compromise.

“Saipan” had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). The film is scheduled for a theatrical release in the United Kingdom and Ireland in 2025, with distribution handled by Wildcard and Vertigo Releasing. It is a co-production between the UK and Ireland, with international sales managed by Bankside Films.

Full Credits

Director: Lisa Barros D’Sa, Glenn Leyburn

Writers: Paul Fraser

Producers and Executive Producers: Macdara Kelleher, John Keville, Trevor Birney, Olly Butler, Patrick O’Neill, Eoin Egan, Rupert Preston, Ed Caffrey, Stephen Kelliher, Sophie Green, Greg Martin, Ursula Devine, Rachael O’Kane

Cast: Steve Coogan, Éanna Hardwicke, Harriet Cains, Alice Lowe, Jamie Beamish, Alex Murphy, Peter McDonald, Aoife Hinds, Jack Hickey, Niall McNamee

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Piers McGrail

Editors: John Murphy, Gavin Buckley

Composer: David Holmes

The Review

Saipan

8.5 Score

Saipan is a blistering character study disguised as a sports film. Anchored by two towering performances from Éanna Hardwicke and Steve Coogan, it transforms a footnote of football history into a sharp, tense, and surprisingly funny examination of pride, professionalism, and national identity. It is a compelling psychological drama that smartly uses its specific setting to explore universal conflicts, making for a fascinating and intellectually rewarding watch.

PROS

  • Exceptional lead performances that capture the complex central dynamic.
  • An intelligent script that explores deep themes of professionalism and national identity.
  • Tense, effective direction that skillfully blends archival footage with dramatized scenes.
  • A successful and distinct tone that mixes high-stakes drama with dark humor.

CONS

  • The niche subject matter might be a barrier for viewers unfamiliar with the real-life incident.
  • Its narrative viewpoint is heavily aligned with one character, which may feel one-sided.
  • The intentionally claustrophobic focus on interiors may disappoint those expecting a visually expansive sports movie.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: 2025 Toronto Film FestivalAlex MurphyAlice LoweBiographyDramaÉanna HardwickeFeaturedFinepoint FilmsGlenn LeyburnHarriet CainsHistoryJack HickeyJamie BeamishLisa Barros D'SaNiall McNameeSaipanSportsSteve CooganWild Atlantic Pictures
Previous Post

John Candy: I Like Me Review: Celebrating an Icon, Guarding a Man

Next Post

The Echoes of Survivors: Inside Korea’s Tragedies Review: Vital Stories, Vexing Choices

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Rogue Trooper Review

    Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Westies Review: Hell’s Kitchen Serves Another Cold-Blooded Crime Saga

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • One Piece: Heroines Review: Nami Takes the Runway

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Sentinels Review: Super Soldiers Sink Into the Mud

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Dark Review: Fear Watches from the Window

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Chainsmoker Cat Review: The Sad Cat Beneath the Stench

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

The Apartment Job Review (
TV Shows

The Apartment Job Review: Crime Comes to the Residents’ Association

1 day ago
The Odyssey Review
Movies

The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

2 days ago
Lucky Review
TV Shows

Lucky Review: Anya Taylor-Joy Runs Faster Than the Story

2 days ago
The Man Will Burn Review
TV Shows

The Man Will Burn Review: Who Owns the Fire?

3 days ago
Ride or Die Review
TV Shows

Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely