Hillsborough (2014 film)

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Hillsborough
Directed byDaniel Gordon
Based onHillsborough disaster
Produced byDaniel Gordon
Edited byAndy R. Worboys
Production
companies
Release dates
  • 15 April 2014 (2014-04-15) (United States)
  • 8 May 2016 (2016-05-08) (United Kingdom)
Running time
121 minutes
Countries
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Hillsborough is a 2014 documentary about the Hillsborough disaster. Directed and produced by Daniel Gordon, the two-hour film chronicles the disaster, the investigations, and their lingering effects; it also includes interviews with survivors, victims' relatives, police officers and investigators. It was co-produced by ESPN and BBC, first airing as a part of ESPN's series of sports films entitled 30 for 30, under the heading "Soccer Stories". Hillsborough aired in the United States on ESPN on 15 April 2014, the 25th anniversary of the disaster.[1][2] The documentary could not be shown in the United Kingdom when it originally aired in 2014, due to the High Court inquest of 2012 still being in progress. However, after the verdict of the inquest had been announced, the BBC aired the documentary on 8 May 2016, with additional footage from the inquest and final verdict.

Events described in the film

In 2012, the Hillsborough Independent Panel released its report and established an archive of media relating to the disaster. Much of the evidence reviewed by the panel had not been previously released to the public or to the media.[3] Gordon's film draws on this newly available evidence to describe the events of 15 April 1989, as well as their causes and their consequences.

Before the disaster

The day of the disaster (15 April 1989)

After the disaster

  • On 16 April 1989, Margaret Thatcher and Bernard Ingham and others arrived at Hillsborough. Although the official inquiry would state that fan behaviour was not the cause of the disaster, Ingham attributed the disaster to a "tanked-up mob of Liverpool supporters."
  • Soon after that, newspapers published falsehoods about fan drunkenness and hooliganism including fans urinating on police. The stories were based on unsubstantiated claims made by, among others, a senior police official and a local MP who had not attended the match.
  • Investigators examined the turnstiles for their mechanical performance and determined how many people arrived and when. Despite claims that "thousands" of fans had rushed in, the Gate C surveillance camera showed about 1400 people entering (approximately the capacity of the four central terraces).
  • An attempt had been made after the disaster, to allege that the exit gate called Gate C had been forced open by rowdy fans trying to enter the ground before the match; it had in fact been opened on police order.
  • On order of the coroner
    Stefan Popper
    , the dead were blood-tested for alcohol. Those found positive, when identified, were checked through police records for criminal records.
  • The movie described a case of
    Beighton
    in Sheffield.
  • August 1989: the preliminary version of the Taylor Report came out.
  • January 1990: the final version of the Taylor Report came out. It did not believe the stories about fan misbehaviour. But the coroner, acting independently of Taylor, reported "accidental death" for all the victims.
  • March 1993: life support for Tony Bland was switched off, and he became the 96th victim of the Hillsborough disaster; see Hillsborough disaster#Stuart-Smith scrutiny.
  • 1996:
    boxfile
    containing some of the policemen's typed reports, with the alterations described above, and called it "sanitising".
  • 1997: the Labour Party came into power and promised to revisit Hillsborough.
  • October 1998: Scraton went to the House of Lords's reading room in Parliament in London, and there was shown the police report papers, stacked untidily on a table in cardboard boxes. Inside the boxes, the police reports were in a thoroughly disordered and shuffled condition, some as photocopies. He sorted them into the three versions of each report (handwritten, original typed, edited), collated them, examined them, and reported what he found.
  • 2000: The Hillsborough Family Support Group
    dereliction of duty, etc., at Hillsborough. The jury acquitted Murray and were hung
    on Duckenfield.
  • 15 April 2009: to mark the 20th anniversary of the Hillsborough Disaster, 30,000 people attended a memorial service at Anfield in Liverpool. During the service, a speech by then Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport Andy Burnham was interrupted by a repeated chant started among the audience: "Justice for the 96!", drowning out the rest of his speech.
  • January 2010: the British government established the
    Hillsborough Independent Panel
    , to oversee the release of documents about the disaster.

See also

References

  1. ^ Web page for 30 for 30: Hillsborough
  2. ^ "When a game turned into a disaster," from The New York Times, 14 April 2014
  3. ^ "Hillsborough Independent Panel". Hillsborough Independent Panel: Disclosed Material and Report. 2012. Archived from the original on 13 September 2012. Retrieved 27 April 2016. Over 450,000 pages reviewed – Documents and other material from the contributing organisations including reports, minutes of meetings, transcripts, witness statements, letters and memos, records of telephone calls.

External links