LFG (2021) Poster

(2021)

User Reviews

Review this title
24 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
A Good Entry Into This Topic
emppetit28 June 2021
This film is entertaining, educational, and enlightening. My only criticism is the film feels more like a PR pitch ("why the women deserve equal pay rates") than an analysis of the legal case. The US Soccer Federation refused to participate, so there's no "other side" presented. The women do absolutely deserve the opportunity to make equal pay rates to the men. But I would have liked to learn more about the counter arguments (for the sake of being better informed). There is a brief recap at the end where Megan does give a bit of context to the counter argument.

I hope more people will post reviews of the film itself. Currently the documentary has a very poor overall score due to 1 star reviews from users who are personally offended by the concept of gender equality (but have nothing direct to say about the film).
22 out of 61 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Inspiring film on so many levels
paul-allaer27 June 2021
"LFG" (2021 release; 104 min.) is a documentary about the US Women's National Soccer Team's law suit against the US Soccer Federation, demanding equal pay (as compared to the Men's National Soccer Team). As the movie opens, we get brief glimpses of Jessica McDonald, Megan Rapinoe, Kristen Press and others, explaining what "LFG" actually stands for (sorry, can't tell you or my review will violate review standards). We then go to "Day 1, March 8, 2019, International Women's Day", when the law suit is filed and the ladies explain in detail how things like money, training resources, traveling conditions (hotels and planes) are heavily skewed towards the Men's National Team, even though the Women's National Team is far more successful (multiple World Cups wins and Olympic Gold Medals). The law suit comes just 3 months before the 2019 World Cup opens in France. At this point we are 10 min. Into the documentary.

Couple of comments: this is the latest from Oscar-nominated documentary makers (and husband and wife) Andrea Nix Fine and Sean Fine. Here they get seemingly unfettered access to many stars of the US Women's National Soccer Team as they battle for glory in the 2019 World Cup and they battle their employer (US Soccer Federation) for better (if not equal) pay. As to the documentary itself: it clearly shows the heavy toll the law suit takes on these ladies, while the USSF deploys any and all possible means (including law firms and lobbyists) to block the law suit at every possible level and instance, just disgraceful frankly. When Rapinoe makes a comment that then-President Trump trashes in a tweet, Rapinoe pushes back. Good for her. Lest anyone forget: Trump is the guy who tried to overthrow the US Congress because he didn't like the Nov '20 presidential election results (which showed who he is: a lyin' L-O-S-E-R). As to the substance of the law suit: this is an economic issue that should be easily resolved with a verified audit of the revenues generated by the Men's and the Women's soccer team. Instead the USSF argues that women are "inherently inferior" to men. No, really, they claim that with a straight face. Bottom line: this documentary is inspirational on so many levels. Hats off to the makers of this film, and of course to the women soccer players, who under tremendous pressure deliver on and off the field with grace and determination and skill (and whereas the US Men's National Soccer team embarrassed the game and didn't even qualify for the most recent World Cup).

"LFG" premiered at the recent Tribeca Film Festival and then went straight to HBO Max a few days ago, where I caught it the other night. If you have any interest in the state of soccer in this country, or how women continue to face gender discrimination to this very day, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
24 out of 70 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Purely a PR spin where CNN lets the women's team repeat demonstrable lies
MGsubbie21 August 2023
Almost every claim made by the lawyer in the documentary is a bold-faced lie.

-The women's team was offered the exact same pay structure as the men, but they did not want that contract, they collectively bargained for a different type of contract. Afterwards they realized that the original contract meant they would earn more, and so they claimed discrimination. Let me emphasis : They claim the contract that they wanted, that they negotiated for (because they didn't like the pay structure of the men's team) is discrimination against them. A complete joke.

-This contract includes paid maternal leave, health care plans, and about 2 dozen other benefits that the men's team simply does not get.

-This contract meant that when all soccer was cancelled due to covid, the women's team continued getting their guaranteed 100,000 payment. The men earned 0 dollars during this season.

-So if anything, the men's team gets to argue pay discrimination, not the women's team.

-The women's team wasn't being paid less than the men's team, they were being paid MORE. Not just in total, but on a PER MATCH basis.

-The women's team gets a substantially larger cut from the women's world cup earnings than the men from the men's world cup.

The women's team does not want equal pay. They want the low risk contract that they had previously, combined with the high reward that the men's team wants. In other words, they want a contract that is superior to the men's contract in every way.

This whole documentary is nothing but lies and a PR spin to back up pure entitlement.

Edit : Addressing some of the arguments made in the other reviews :

-"The women's team brings in more revenue." No, no they don't. They bring in more revenue in the United States, but international soccer is an international sport. On an international level, the women's team brings in substantially less revenue. The women's world cup finale only brings in as many viewers as the average men's world cup match. And even if only the revenue in the US counts, the revenue split was about 100 thousand out of around 50 million. The difference in revenue brought in was SMALLER than the difference in pay. And to emphasize this again : The women's team earned MORE. Not just in total, not just per match, but also relative to the amount of revenue generated in the United States!

-"They work 3 times as hard." That's another demonstrable lie. The women's team only has to play a maximum of 3 matches in order to secure a spot on the women's cup. The men's team has to play a maximum of 10 matches to secure a spot on the men's cup. In 2018, there were 210 men's world teams who try to qualify, while there were only 46 women's teams in 2019. Which leads to the next argument.

-"The women's team is better, so they deserve more." The women's team is only better relative to the other women's teams than the men's team is to the other men's teams. Only 4 other women's teams have won the world cup, while 8 different teams have won the men's world cup. Considering national women's teams tend to not have any other women on the same level to play scrimmage matches against, they instead opt to play against teenage boys. At which point they lost 7-1 to boys under 15. They're not even better than middle school boys, how are they better than adult men?
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Do not listen to the other reviewers
sophierendina26 June 2021
Most of the other reviewers have said they haven't even watched the film. If you care about women's rights and are not a caveman, this film is a great deep dive into the value institutions put on women's work. These women deserve equal pay.
55 out of 130 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Grow a brain please
Gramoulk31 May 2023
Gonna cut straight to the point here. Men enjoy sports more than women on average. Pro female athletes have nobody to blame for them being underpaid but other women. The average women does not care about womens sports at all. That is why womens sports is so low. Do you expect an audience to be entertained by a slower less skilled version of a sport? This is an equal world, the demand is entertainment... money talks.... its not the men teams fault that women are slower and less skilled on average in every sport. Men get more viewers so they get more money. Women get less viewers so they get less money.

And if you would like to argue that the women should be paid more because they win more thats a decent point but its massively overshadowed by the fact that nobody cares about womens sports. Nobody is gonna watch a watered down version of an entertainment product. You can claim sexism all you want, but then ask yourself why roughly 8/10 women dont care about womens pro athletics to any degree.

Every person on here will cry foul play, and then themselves and every other female family member they have wont watch a single WNBA game in their life.
6 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Important Documentary
npaulsen-2533126 June 2021
This documentary does a great job of telling the story of the Women's National Soccer Team and their ongoing journey towards equality. I am quite frankly stunned by the negative reviews that have been left on this site by people who likely believe women do not deserve equal access and equal pay. The women in this documentary are still playing as the number one team in the world while being paid less than their male counterparts who didn't even qualify for the last World Cup.

As an attorney myself, I believe the film did a great job of showcasing the legal fight that happens while engaging with a lawsuit and how damaging summary judgement decisions can be when Judges are able to be the sole deciding person.

This documentary should be celebrated along with the Women's National Soccer Team that made it possible. People need to hear this story and understand the prospective of the women who have had to work twice as hard to still be given less than men.

Cheers to the creation of this documentary!
39 out of 93 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Really captivating, with great music
therealbth25 June 2021
A lot of people are upset with this film from a political basis but have nothing to say as to their opinions on the actual documentary because they're too blinded by rage. I hope I can give an unbiased take on the film!

First of all, the arguments: Even though the USSF didn't give an on-camera interview, they still did a great job of representing the other side's main points. It's obviously an opinion doc, so it counters each point. Duh. They could probably have done more of these counterpoints, but considering the USSF declined an interview and this is blantantly a documentary with an agenda, I'm not upset with the amount they did.

Second, did I like the film itself? Hell yeah! It was really engaging and immersive, and I felt like I got to know the two main soccer players they interviewed really well. The little detours and breaks it took here and there just made the emotional connections to the players and the issue stronger. They provided context that made the actual legal battle all the more meaningful for me as a viewer.

Finally, the film was super motivational. Even if you disagree with the premise, you have to admit that these women work really hard against some tough odds. They don't brag, either. They show that they do what they do because they have self-respect, belief in their cause, and a underlying drive to make the world a better place. You can't fault them for lack of tenacity. I admit it makes me want to do something like that in my life- to make the world a little fairer for a future generation.

Oh, and last but definitely not least, the music kinda rocked. There was this one acapella concert song that played a few times and first it could me a bit off guard, but by the end, when everything came to it's hesitant conclusion, it felt super epic and meaningful. And that wasn't the only bop in the soundtrack!

Overall, an engaging, inspiring, well-made doc. I recommend it. Even if you disagree with equal pay for women's sports- give it a shot. Just for shits and giggles.
41 out of 102 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great film
michellemcphil26 June 2021
I guarantee you that most of the other reviewers didn't even watch the film. It's a compelling and well-made documentary that will appeal to fans of the sport, regardless of whether or not they've been following the lawsuit.
34 out of 85 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
*sigh*
taylormadsen25 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Other reviewers must not have paid attention to the facts presented in the film.

The USWNT has won 4 world cup championships. That's 4 more than the men have won. They rought in more revenue than the men's team. They. Win. More. The USWNT and their lawyers successfully refuted every argument the federation presented until the only thing they had left was "bUt WoMeN aRe BiOlOgIcAlLy InFeRiOr." Classic.

Has anyone considered that the women's game would improve (even more) if they were paid the same as men? As it stands, highly skilled female players are faced with the choice of pursuing their dreams of a career playing for the US National Team and making a relatively mediocre salary, or hanging their cleats up and getting a serving or desk job that pays more for WAY less work.

Female soccer players are playing the same exact game, and they put in the same amount of work (or more) as their male counterparts. The only difference is the women have 4 times more World Cup Championship trophies. The lack of respect for women's soccer (and women's sports, in general) is irrelevant -- the fact is this is the most successful women's national soccer club in history.

Pay the girls, Snoop Dogg said so.
41 out of 118 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Trolls will try, women will WIN
CameronRVideo1 July 2021
I cried tears of pride and joy and anger many times watching this. An absolute 10 of a documentary. And then to see the pathetic sexist trolls dragging the rating with their feelings was both a shock and a reminder that we still live in the stone ages. These one star ratings are from little overemotional boys who can't separate their insecurity from filmmaking. How can anyone watch this and say "these women should shut up?" GOD! Each one of you would square up with Megan Rapinoe in a field shoot out match and see how you feel. How can you be against equal pay for these incredibly talented women? Arguably some of the most well-known athletes in the world? Winners far more than the men? And somehow he feel the need to drag down the ratings on this phone because it makes you feel like more than a man? How many more years but we have to live like this? I'm glad I watch this film I'm grateful for it. I highly recommend it. I hope other women and like-minded Film lovers will add more appropriate ratings that reflect the quality of this film making.
21 out of 60 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Don't let the trolls get you down
anjiscalf1 July 2021
This is a really important conversation to be had and small minded trolls seem to be tanking the reviews because they are uncomfortable having a discussion. Don't let the hate turn you away - I found it inspirational as heck and on the eve of the 2021 Olympics it's a great time to learn about their struggle AND vote with your eyeballs! Watch them play!
18 out of 50 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
amazing!
elledes23 June 2021
Equal pay equal play! I love how the documentary shedded light on motherhood and what it means to fight for equality in 2020/2021.
41 out of 136 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Don't understand the hate?
jesderm7 July 2021
Exactly the documentary these team needs in deserves to bring attention to a major social issue that applies to more than just professional soccer. Love this team. LFG.
16 out of 47 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
We need equal pay
To the people giving this a 1 rating, it's clear you did not actually watch the documentary.

The documentary lays out every reason the pay from US Soccer is not equal or equitable.

Watch. The. Documentary.

Same job, same work place, different gender.
18 out of 56 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Awesome & Inspiring
samanthalcapista1 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, WE KNOW WHO PRODUCED THE DAMN DOCUMENTARY!!!! I happen to think it was very well made, informative, and attention grabbing.

It seems like the ladies actually made MORE money for USSF than the men, and the most watch game was the 2015 WOMENS World Cup but I haven't audited the financial statements to confirm or deny.

Though I don't think it's right, I can't argue with the ruling. Of course any business is going to offer the lowest *acceptable* compensation... and also, Scottie Pippen.

What I can argue with - THIS ISN'T ABOUT THE PLAYERS WHO ARE MILLIONAIRES! SOME OF THEM MAKE LESS THAN A WAITRESS!!!!!

How dare Megan Rapinoe use her platform to advance an agenda that she is passionate about?!!? Doesn't she know?? Women are only allowed to post promiscuous photos on social media.... Silly girl!

Hopefully the public's awareness forces a correction to future contracts because these are among the few INFLUENTIAL women who actually represent a positive image in today's society!!!
17 out of 53 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Ignore negative reviews just from their comments you can tell they didn't watch.
jillimsand29 June 2021
This is an important topic that is unfortunately being naysayed by those who are not for equality between the sexes, who if you watch the movie and then read their comments you will see they didn't actually watch it.

If you don't support equal pay then you probably should pass on this movie.

BUT if you are a soccer fan and follow the US team or just think people should be paid the same for doing the same work then you will enjoy this movie. Any women will identify with the experience of having to over perform to receive a fraction of the respect and compensation as their male counterparts. This documentary brought tears to my eyes because of the inspiration and hope it provides that things will change.
12 out of 38 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Anyone who rated this poorly, missed the point and is part of the problem.
julie-130-4189563 August 2021
So many 1 stars that comment about how much money the team DID make. That is not the point. They should make a lot, all pro athletes make a lot compared to other professions. The point is, they get paid less for the same success as men. They are paid based performance and wins, they made more overall (barely) but they worked 3 times as hard. Just because their income is more than most of us watching, doesn't mean that wage gap does not apply. It does. Great documentary and extraordinary woman and athletes! I can't wait for my daughter to watch this!
13 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Equal pay
lfsomers19 January 2022
I was astounded by the level of disrespect these women get. The numbers are right there and for some reason people refuse to believe/see it. I will never understand the argument against equal pay. This documentary opened my eyes. I played soccer all of my life and grew up supporting and watching these women I never knew how much less they were getting compared to the men. Unbelievable. Unacceptable.
5 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Insightful
ameliag-246813 July 2021
Insightful. USWNT are deserving of more support than they get.
10 out of 38 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Great documentary!
dyrnnc12 October 2021
How well this documentary is made is only surpassed by the message it conveys. A great watch!
6 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Mandatory
Shepodd7 September 2021
This is an important film.

If you believe in equality you and everyone you know ought to see this historic film.

Please watch.
8 out of 32 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
THANK YOU!!!
jamie_stiehl2 July 2021
Thank you for taking on this fight and sharing your story.
10 out of 46 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
It was amazing!
bardiaazari6 March 2022
The fact that they finally won, makes this documentary so much better.

I loved every second of it and I really recommend it.

I burst into tears multiple times.

Specially when Jess was saying goodbye to Jeremiah.

They absolutely deserved this and I'm so happy they've finally got it.
3 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed