While the subject is undeniably crucial, ‘The Last Taboo’ left me wanting a more rigorous investigative edge. The personal stories are powerful, yet the film occasionally skirts a deeper analysis of the institutions, federations, and commercial interests that…
The Last Taboo
Hard to imagine, but true: According to current estimates, out of 500,000 active male football professionals worldwide, under ten (10) are openly homosexual. While homosexuality hardly plays a…
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As a piece of cultural journalism, this is first rate. The film smartly frames football not as an exception but as a magnifying glass for societal hypocrisies around masculinity and acceptance. The inclusion of activist Peter Tatchell broadens…
A heartbreaking and profoundly important film. ‘The Last Taboo’ masterfully weaves the past and present to show how little has fundamentally changed. Amal Fashanu’s contribution is the emotional core, transforming her uncle from a headline into a haunting…
This documentary serves its vital subject matter with clarity, if not great cinematic flair. The testimonies from Fashanu, Hitzlsperger, and American player Collin Martin are compelling and frankly damning for the football establishment. However, the direction feels somewhat…
‘The Last Taboo’ is a sobering and essential audit of football’s conscience. The film’s power lies in its stark juxtaposition: a world sport celebrating diversity in theory, yet harbouring a climate of such fear that openly gay players…
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The documentary positions professional football as a conspicuous laggard in the march toward LGBTQ+ acceptance. By contrasting the sport's silence with wider societal progress, it frames football's taboo as a significant cultural battleground. Featuring activist Peter Tatchell underscores this link, situating the players' individual struggles within a larger human rights framework. The film thus becomes a case study in how even globally influential institutions can harbour regressive attitudes.