McDonald’s Wrexham branch in the early hours of Sunday 23 April 2023. The store is full. The town’s football club, Wrexham FC, took center stage this afternoon. Dead Pool An enjoyable documentary from actor Ryan Reynolds and producer Rob McElhenney. Welcome to Wrexham – Promotion to the Football League is guaranteed. A group of Wrexham players, led by 38-goal striker Paul Mullin, fell through the doors. McDonald’s explodes and chants begin: “Fuck the Tories, fuck the Tories, fuck the Tories.”
“I didn’t start this,” Mullin lamely stresses in his book. But he certainly came up with the slogan after stitching it onto his boots last October and gleefully showing off the results on social media. “When someone shouts ‘Fuck Tory!’ “If you start singing,” he writes, “I’d like to join in… I’ll be honest. I’ve always used the word ‘Tory’ as a swear word.”
Mullin, 29, is the epitome of Wrexham’s revolution – the club’s goal-scoring machine. My Wrexham story Both trace his life and explain what happened when Hollywood came to North Wales.
The memoir, directed by Christopher Eccleston and Phil Tufnell’s ghostwriter John Woodhouse, oscillates between braggadocio (“the bigger the event, the more I like it”) and restraint (there is little memorabilia in the Mullin house), and Mullin turns out to be a charming, somewhat unusual figure. .
Mullin is old-fashioned in many ways, lives close to where he grew up (“I never leave here unless I have to”), happily eats and drinks whatever he wants and trains as he pleases, oblivious to career opportunities. growth. good diet and fitness program.
But his son Albie has severe autism, which limits verbal communication. Mullins’s honesty (“I think every minute about how I can help him… sometimes I get anxious and sit on the couch and cry… I don’t care that he’s autistic, I just have fear.”) Add rawness and resignation to what could easily have been the story of just another footballer.
There’s certainly a lot to be said for a beautiful game. Mullin talks about how McElhenney discovered this through documentaries such as Football. Sunderland until I die and tasked his friend, the Eton-educated British actor Humphrey Career, with finding a corrupt, dying club ripe for both a similar series and a transformation of football.
Ker chose struggling Wrexham, which had been operating since 1864 without bothering the big trophy engravers or doing its thing upstairs.
By their own admission the pair were “football enthusiasts” but, as Mullin points out, they didn’t just buy Wrexham, they bought enter This. They were the right people in the right place at the right time, and Mullin is still impressed: “We’re talking about two ordinary people who succeeded.”
Without signing big names, McElhenney and Reynolds transformed the players, including Mullin, into a new force, bringing confidence and pride to a tough town.
Despite his occasional cynicism (“This is the world we live in: full of fools”), Mullin became an important part of his dream by leaving the second division to join Cambridge United. It is clear that he is obsessed with planning for Albie’s difficult future and readily admits that Wrexham paid better.
Albie’s difficulties brought Mullin and his partner Molly to the fore. They’ll take care of it too My Wrexham story is a great memoir without compromising the football fairytale where everyone seems to be a winner. If Mullin wants us to believe it, it’s a fairy tale come true.