American movie industry, Hollywood,
is to make a movie based on the bizarre transfer of three million
dollars meant for the Black Stars from Ghana to Brazil via a chartered
flight.
The Guardian reported Monday that the screenplay, to be
written by Darryl Wharton-Rigby, will centre on a courier tasked with
bringing $3m (£1.76m) across the Atlantic to Brazil in an effort to stop
the Ghanaian football team quitting the competition in protest at lack
of pay.
It is based on a real-life impasse which affected the
west African team prior to their exit at the group stage last week,
though fictional elements will be incorporated to further spice up the
proposed movie, the report stated.
Continue reading:
The plot
sees the $3m stolen after the courier is ambushed. He then has fewer
than 12 hours to recover the money or face the wrath of his employers
(and presumably the Ghanaian footballers).
"The world has soccer
fever and Hollywood has caught it," said Wharton-Rigby, a former staff
writer for Homicide: Life on the Street, the celebrated Emmy-winning TV
series from producer David Simon which predated the even more successful
The Wire.
The screenplay has been optioned by US production
company Bugeater, whose founders Dan Mirvish and Barry Hennessey will
produce the film.
Hennessy, an Emmy winner for reality TV show The
Amazing Race, told the Wrap: "I've shot extensively in both Ghana and
Brazil, and this is a perfect project to capture the raw energy that
both countries have to offer."
Ghana's president, John Dramani
Mahama, was forced to send a plane containing $3m to Brasília for the
players to share after a row over appearance fees threatened to see the
team go on strike.
Ghana, who at one point refused to train due
to lack of renumeration, subsequently lost their final group match 2-1
to Portugal and exited the competition.
Wharton-Rigby's 1998
film Detention won the best director prize at the Urbanworld film
festival. The thriller is the second football-related project to emerge
in the past few weeks, following news that Hollywood studio Warner Bros
plans to capitalise on US World Cup fever with a remake of cult classic
Michael Caine tale Escape to Victory.American movie industry, Hollywood,
is to make a movie based on the bizarre transfer of three million
dollars meant for the Black Stars from Ghana to Brazil via a chartered
flight.
The Guardian reported Monday that the screenplay, to be
written by Darryl Wharton-Rigby, will centre on a courier tasked with
bringing $3m (£1.76m) across the Atlantic to Brazil in an effort to stop
the Ghanaian football team quitting the competition in protest at lack
of pay.
It is based on a real-life impasse which affected the
west African team prior to their exit at the group stage last week,
though fictional elements will be incorporated to further spice up the
proposed movie, the report stated.
Continue reading:
The plot
sees the $3m stolen after the courier is ambushed. He then has fewer
than 12 hours to recover the money or face the wrath of his employers
(and presumably the Ghanaian footballers).
"The world has soccer
fever and Hollywood has caught it," said Wharton-Rigby, a former staff
writer for Homicide: Life on the Street, the celebrated Emmy-winning TV
series from producer David Simon which predated the even more successful
The Wire.
The screenplay has been optioned by US production
company Bugeater, whose founders Dan Mirvish and Barry Hennessey will
produce the film.
Hennessy, an Emmy winner for reality TV show The
Amazing Race, told the Wrap: "I've shot extensively in both Ghana and
Brazil, and this is a perfect project to capture the raw energy that
both countries have to offer."
Ghana's president, John Dramani
Mahama, was forced to send a plane containing $3m to Brasília for the
players to share after a row over appearance fees threatened to see the
team go on strike.
Ghana, who at one point refused to train due
to lack of renumeration, subsequently lost their final group match 2-1
to Portugal and exited the competition.
Wharton-Rigby's 1998
film Detention won the best director prize at the Urbanworld film
festival. The thriller is the second football-related project to emerge
in the past few weeks, following news that Hollywood studio Warner Bros
plans to capitalise on US World Cup fever with a remake of cult classic
Michael Caine tale Escape to Victory.
Monday, June 30, 2014
Hollywood To Make Film On Ghana's $3m World Cup Drama
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