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The Phantom of the Open review – Brit sporting underdog movie right on par

Here’s a film about a guy who likes six sugars in his tea – and the viewer might also need a bit of a sweet tooth. It is an amiably daft and sentimental Britfilm, a comedy of the underdog starring Mark Rylance, based on the strange true story of Maurice Flitcroft, a Barrow-in-Furness shipyard worker and amateur golfer who took up the sport in middle-age. Flitcroft practised on the beach, and became known for cheekily entering the British Open golf championship in 1976 as a self-declared professional, thus circumventing the handicap requirement for amateurs. He found himself competing with the likes of Seve Ballesteros, but chaotically chalked up the worst score in the tournament’s history, to the spluttering rage of the puce-faced, blazer-wearing gentlemen in charge. They tried to ban him but he kept on gatecrashing competitions with wacky disguises and fake names.

This movie about him has been written for the screen by Simon Farnaby – based on the 2010 book of the same name that he co-wrote with Guardian writer Scott Murray – and directed by Craig Roberts. Flitcroft is played by Rylance as an eccentric holy innocent; his long-suffering and affectionate wife is played by Sally Hawkins; and Rhys Ifans is the pop-eyed, pompous club secretary.

Now, maybe this casting feels a bit inevitable, and maybe the Britfilm template itself feels a bit inevitable. We’ve already had a movie inspired by Eddie the Eagle, whose entry into the Winter Olympics as a ski-jumper in 1988 depended, like Flitcroft’s escapade, on exploiting a loophole in the rules. Dream Horse was a more heartfelt true story about a community that bought a Welsh Grand National winner. It could be that this film downplays Maurice’s life as a prankster and hoaxer and

Read more on theguardian.com