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The Bus: A French Football Mutiny

A sharp, often darkly funny documentary about one of modern football’s most infamous implosions. It works best as a character study of ego, power, and public humiliation, with enough political and cultural context to make the scandal feel bigger than sport.

The Bus: A French Football Mutiny

Where to watch: Netflix

Movie · Documentary · R

2026 · 1h 21m

Director: Jérôme Fritel, Christophe Astruc

Starring: Raymond Domenech, Patrice Evra, William Gallas

Overview

This documentary revisits the French football team's controversial 2010 World Cup and the bus strike that sparked global headlines and national outrage.

Director

Jérôme Fritel, Christophe Astruc

Production

Breath Film, Roger Films

Cast

Raymond Domenech, Patrice Evra, William Gallas, Bacary Sagna, Estelle Denis, François Manardo, Roselyne Bachelot, Sébastien Tarrago, Vincent Duluc, Robert Duverne, David Astorga

Where to watch

Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads

Curator Review

Verdict

A sharp, often darkly funny documentary about one of modern football’s most infamous implosions. It works best as a character study of ego, power, and public humiliation, with enough political and cultural context to make the scandal feel bigger than sport.

Best for

  • football fans
  • viewers interested in sports scandals
  • audiences who like political or media-inflected documentaries
  • people drawn to messy, ironic real-life stories

Skip if

  • you want a straightforward match-by-match sports recap
  • you dislike abrasive personalities and locker-room chaos
  • you prefer uplifting underdog stories
  • you are looking for a purely neutral, procedural documentary

Overview

This film revisits the 2010 French national team mutiny with the kind of grim amusement that only hindsight can provide. Rather than treating the episode as a simple sports failure, it frames the bus strike as a collision of ego, authority, class tension, and national embarrassment. The result is less a football documentary than a public autopsy of a team that stopped functioning in front of the world.

Worth noting

What makes it compelling is how much of the drama still feels absurdly contemporary: media frenzy, institutional dysfunction, and men in power making everything worse. The tone can be biting, even gleefully cruel at times, but that suits a story built on contradiction and humiliation. It is especially effective if you enjoy documentaries that expose the human mess behind the headlines.

Bottom line

It may not satisfy viewers looking for tactical analysis or a clean moral arc. But as a piece of scandal storytelling, it is entertaining, revealing, and hard to look away from. The film’s real strength is that it turns a notorious football collapse into something broader and more revealing about French culture and celebrity failure.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Chris001 (4★) · 387 likes

"la finalement on a un vrai entraineur" en parlant de Roselyne Bachelot comment ne pas pleurer de rire

tinux18 · 301 likes

Va te faire enculer sale fils de pute

yanisfandecine (4★) · 281 likes

aqababe aurait dû couvrir l’événement

Zehq (4★) · 204 likes

le journal intime de domenech = le mein kampf de notre siecle

Mr_Heavy1511 (3.5★) · 188 likes

L'amour que je porte pour Raymond Domenech est passé de 0 à -1.

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Themes

sports scandal, team conflict, ego and authority, national identity, media spectacle, class tension, institutional dysfunction, public humiliation

Topics

sports documentary, scandal, locker-room conflict, national identity, media frenzy, dark comedy, institutional failure, 2010s, cultural satire

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