United Passions: Difference between revisions
Content added Content deleted
Dominicmgm (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{work}} {{Workstub}} How do you attempt to cleanup the corruption of your organization? Why, make a movie, of course! '''''United Passions''''' is about the founders of FIFA...") |
Looney Toons (talk | contribs) m (Copyedit (minor)) |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{work}} |
{{work}} |
||
{{Workstub}} |
{{Workstub}} |
||
How do you attempt to |
How do you attempt to clean up the corruption of your organization? Why, make a movie, of course! |
||
'''''United Passions''''' is about the founders of FIFA and how they "dealt with corruption" throughout the 20th century. |
'''''United Passions''''' is about the founders of FIFA and how they "dealt with corruption" throughout the 20th century. |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
It grossed a whopping ''$900'' on its opening weekend. |
It grossed a whopping ''$900'' on its opening weekend. |
||
{{Needs More Info}} |
|||
{{tropelist}} |
{{tropelist}} |
||
* [[Character Shilling]]: The film shamelessly shilled for the FIFA executives, just when they were dogged by a corruption scandal. |
|||
* [[Historical Hero Upgrade]]: FIFA themselves have this, with no mention of their corruption whatsoever. |
* [[Historical Hero Upgrade]]: FIFA themselves have this, with no mention of their corruption whatsoever. |
||
* [[Hypocrite]]: The climax revolves around Blatter coaxing his colleagues to support his anti-corruption campaign by blackmailing them. |
|||
* [[Product Placement]]: One of the major plot points is FIFA securing the rights of Coca-Cola and Adidas. |
* [[Product Placement]]: One of the major plot points is FIFA securing the rights of Coca-Cola and Adidas. |
||
* [[Stock Footage]]: Plenty of it from every World Cup, with no |
* [[Stock Footage]]: Plenty of it from every World Cup, with no re-enactments whatsoever. |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
||
<!-- If you are not comfortable defining categories for pages, leave everything after this line as it is. If you are comfortable defining categories for pages, add categories after this line and delete the "Pages Needing Categories" category. --> |
|||
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] |
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] |
||
[[Category:Films of the 2010s]] |
[[Category:Films of the 2010s]] |
||
[[Category:Pages needing more categories]] |
[[Category:Pages needing more categories]] |
||
[[Category:Film]] |
|||
{{DEFAULTSORT:{{PAGENAME}}}} <!-- If the page name starts with "A", "An", "The" or a punctuation mark, replace "{{PAGENAME}}" with a version of the name without them here. DEFAULTSORT should be the very last thing on the page if it's used at all. --> |
Latest revision as of 12:35, 17 August 2021
This Work page is a stub. You can help All The Tropes by expanding it. If you have checked or updated this page and found the content to be suitable, please remove this notice. |
How do you attempt to clean up the corruption of your organization? Why, make a movie, of course!
United Passions is about the founders of FIFA and how they "dealt with corruption" throughout the 20th century.
It grossed a whopping $900 on its opening weekend.
This page needs a better description. You can help this wiki by expanding or clarifying the information given. |
Tropes used in United Passions include:
- Character Shilling: The film shamelessly shilled for the FIFA executives, just when they were dogged by a corruption scandal.
- Historical Hero Upgrade: FIFA themselves have this, with no mention of their corruption whatsoever.
- Hypocrite: The climax revolves around Blatter coaxing his colleagues to support his anti-corruption campaign by blackmailing them.
- Product Placement: One of the major plot points is FIFA securing the rights of Coca-Cola and Adidas.
- Stock Footage: Plenty of it from every World Cup, with no re-enactments whatsoever.
This page needs more trope entries. You can help this wiki by adding more entries or expanding current ones. |