Date Showing Showing On 16, 18 19 December
Time Showing Monday 6pm, Wednesday 4pm and Thursday 6pm

COPA ‘71

PG 1hrs 30mins
documentary | 2023, UK | English, French, Spanish, Italian
Overview

The extraordinary story of the 1971 Women’s World Cup, which was held in Mexico City and witnessed by more than 100,000 fans. This landmark tournament was dismissed by FIFA and written out of sports history – until now, with dazzling archival footage and interviews with the former players.

Warnings

Mild themes

Director
Rachel Ramsay, James Erskine Featuring
Original Review
Peyton Robinson, Roger Ebert.com
Extracted By
Anne Green
Featuring
Elvira Aracen, Janice Barton, Brandi Chastain

Watch The Trailer

Copa '71 - Official Trailer

Storyline (warning: spoilers)

The #1 record holder for attendance at a women’s sporting event in history was a gauntlet fought on and off the field, a feat you likely haven’t heard of. It’s Copa 71, the first, though unofficial, women’s soccer World Cup. Co-directed by James Erskine and Rachel Ramsey, Copa 71 chronicles the fight for women’s right to play soccer and the revolutionary 1971 grassroots tournament that followed.
Copa 71 comprises interviews with the players and archival footage and photographs that tell not only the overarching story of how the tournament came to be but the individual women’s relationships with the sport. Like many things, when these women were growing up, soccer was considered for men only. Mexican player Silvia Zaragoza describes playing in secret as a child, knowing her father would hit her if she was caught because it was not “how girls should behave.” English player Carol Wilson joined the Air Force instead, saying she thought, “I bet if I join the Air Force, I’ll be able to play football there.” This international social disbarment was coupled with an institutional ban as well. In 1921, the Football Association of England banned women from partaking on official member grounds, a ban that did not lift until 1970.
Along with the many social movements of the 1960s, women’s soccer teams began to form during the decade despite social sentiment. “Perhaps it was a political act,” Elvira Aracén of Mexico remembers. With the formation of these teams, the players recall the mockery and sexualization that came with the men who came to watch them play. And yet, inspired by a localized women’s tournament in Italy the year prior, businessmen saw potential dollar signs in a Women’s World Cup held in Mexico in 1971 in defiance of FIFA’s threats to prevent it. An undercurrent of sisterhood runs through the film, an acknowledgment of the cross they bore together. These women, united under a passion for their sport and the conviction for their right to play it, is stirring, exciting, and lively, a kinetic tale that finally spotlights the revolutionary event that didn’t quite turn the tide but certainly started the wave.

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