All or Nothing: Arsenal
- TV Mini Series
- 2022
- 50m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
6.1K
YOUR RATING
Behind the scenes access to the 2021-22 season of Arsenal, one of the world's biggest football clubs.Behind the scenes access to the 2021-22 season of Arsenal, one of the world's biggest football clubs.Behind the scenes access to the 2021-22 season of Arsenal, one of the world's biggest football clubs.
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- 1 nomination
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- TriviaAll or Nothing: Arsenal was the only major sports documentary filmed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Featured review
Forever Invincible
There is something very special happening at Arsenal football club and Arteta is at the heart of it. As I read Stuart Jeffries very bias review in the guardian I am somewhat stunned how the guy is still in a job! His main head line is Mikel Arteta is like a supply teacher out of his depth! Well you know what I give your review mate, zero out of ten. He talks of a team in decline comparing them to Everton or Aston Villa with the words no offence, added in lazily! This guys review is so distant from the truth he should retire from writing with immediate effect. In fact I doubt he even got to episode two; where we see the fight back after some very tough opening fixture. The fight back comes against none other than Tottenham Hotspur's. To some degree, you'd think a man employed to review in a top uk paper would have to be seen as neutral. However we don't read this in Stuart Jeffries review. Today is the beginning of the 22/23 season and I'm looking forward to see how Mikel Arteta does with what I regard as finally his team. How Mikel will take Arsenal back to the promise land and prove Stuart Jeffries wrong!
So everything or nothing starts off extremely tough for Arsenal, they begin a season without both Lacazette and Aubameyang; not mentioned in Jeffries review by the way. They start away to a newly promoted Brentford, followed by Chelsea and then titles winners Manchester City. What is evident is this is a very young Arsenal team with plenty of passion. It's a team that is to win stuff in the future and be much more than a mediocre team. The bond between the players is touching at times alongside the introduction of Aaron Ramsdale. Ramsdale was the victim of much abuse when first joining the club, whilst Saka suffered racist abuse early on from missing a penalty for England. There is some heart felt moment in Ramsdale's opening game, not only was his family present it was also Arsenal's first win of the season. Ramsdale managed a clean shirt and pushed the boys forward in the games to come. Three of the back five defenders had been new signings with Mikel Arteta adamantly trying to get them on the same level.
This is a behind the scenes look at the goings on of this historic football club. We get interviews with Josh Kroenke on how they have only really had full control of the club since 2018 and how he has high hopes of putting Arsenal back where they once were. Thierry Henry is insightful discussing how young players of today have so much pressure of what come before them, yet how different football is today. Kinda like it's not about being the next me, but the next you. This documentary is everything an Arsenal fan could hope to see behind the scenes. Once more maybe, just maybe Arteta has what it takes to get this club winning big things again! I'm looking forward to referring back to Stuart Jeffries review on how out of depth Arteta is; because hasn't he already won a fa cup? If anybody is out of depth here it's you Stuart! Overall all the all or nothing series on Amazon have been great to watch, whether you support them or not.
So everything or nothing starts off extremely tough for Arsenal, they begin a season without both Lacazette and Aubameyang; not mentioned in Jeffries review by the way. They start away to a newly promoted Brentford, followed by Chelsea and then titles winners Manchester City. What is evident is this is a very young Arsenal team with plenty of passion. It's a team that is to win stuff in the future and be much more than a mediocre team. The bond between the players is touching at times alongside the introduction of Aaron Ramsdale. Ramsdale was the victim of much abuse when first joining the club, whilst Saka suffered racist abuse early on from missing a penalty for England. There is some heart felt moment in Ramsdale's opening game, not only was his family present it was also Arsenal's first win of the season. Ramsdale managed a clean shirt and pushed the boys forward in the games to come. Three of the back five defenders had been new signings with Mikel Arteta adamantly trying to get them on the same level.
This is a behind the scenes look at the goings on of this historic football club. We get interviews with Josh Kroenke on how they have only really had full control of the club since 2018 and how he has high hopes of putting Arsenal back where they once were. Thierry Henry is insightful discussing how young players of today have so much pressure of what come before them, yet how different football is today. Kinda like it's not about being the next me, but the next you. This documentary is everything an Arsenal fan could hope to see behind the scenes. Once more maybe, just maybe Arteta has what it takes to get this club winning big things again! I'm looking forward to referring back to Stuart Jeffries review on how out of depth Arteta is; because hasn't he already won a fa cup? If anybody is out of depth here it's you Stuart! Overall all the all or nothing series on Amazon have been great to watch, whether you support them or not.
helpful•318
- kelboy10
- Aug 5, 2022
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- Ya Hep Ya Hiç: Arsenal
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- Runtime50 minutes
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