The film Saipan, depicting Roy Keane's infamous row with manager Mick McCarthy during the 2002 World Cup, has become a hit in Ireland and is now opening in the UK. Screenwriter Paul Fraser aimed to create a story focused on human drama rather than on-field action, avoiding common pitfalls of football movies. The production emphasizes themes of masculinity and Irish identity from the Celtic Tiger era.
Saipan centers on the schism between Roy Keane, played by Éanna Hardwicke, and Mick McCarthy that led to Keane's departure from Ireland's 2002 World Cup squad before the tournament began. The story unfolds mostly in a decrepit hotel, with a notable exception: a scene of Keane practicing tennis alone to affirm his athletic prowess.
Fraser, a football enthusiast and collaborator with director Shane Meadows, explains the challenges of adapting the sport to cinema. "Ninety minutes is what we get in a game, give or take. Films are also 90 minutes. And the experience of the two things are fundamentally different," he says. He notes that the intense emotions from live matches, which can feel life-threatening, do not translate well to film. This insight stems from an early project, TwentyFourSeven (1997), originally set around a grassroots football team but relocated to a boxing ring after failing to capture the sport's visual tensions. Their team's worst match ended 24-0 in a loss against a prison side, marked by distractions like players getting stoned during corners.
Football films have proliferated since the Premier League's 1992 launch and Fever Pitch's 1997 adaptation, driven by growing middle-class interest, as per film lecturer Stephen Glynn. Yet many, like Mike Bassett: England Manager (2001), the Goal! trilogy (2005-2009), and United Passions (2014), have flopped due to unconvincing match action. Glynn highlights that most footballers cannot act, and fans detect fakeness in wide shots, unlike the poise of players like Thierry Henry, akin to Fred Astaire's dance sequences. Successful alternatives include documentaries such as Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait (2006) and Asif Kapadia's Diego Maradona (2019), which authentically capture personalities and play.
Saipan prioritizes personal stories over generic sporting narratives, appealing to non-fans by humanizing Keane and McCarthy, both from working-class backgrounds thrust into the global spotlight. Described as Ireland's "most important unimportant event," it has drawn praise in Ireland but criticism for fictionalizing details, like camp drinking. Former player Kevin Kilbane wrote in the Irish Times: "Never let the truth get in the way of a good story." Fraser embraces this, quoting Mark Twain: he crafted a "made-up story" without consulting participants, earning five stars for entertainment but none for accuracy from one player.