PARIS 75 – The European Cup Final Football Tried To Forget
A special anniversary screening including Q&A with Paris 75 Director, Harvey Marcus.
PARIS 75 - The Europe Cup Final Football Tried To Forget
A special screening including Q&A with Paris 75 Director, Harvey Marcus
To mark the 51st anniversary of arguably Leeds United’s biggest game and greatest travesty in its history, PARIS 75 – one of the UK’S biggest independent box -office hits of
2025 is playing a select number of cinemas in a series of one-off screenings.
Fifty years on, at each and every game, Leeds United fans still sing the same refrain, ‘We Are The Champions, Champions Of Europe’.
PARIS 75 – The European Cup Final Football Tried To Forget, takes a unique look at a season and, ultimately, a match steeped in controversy and myth which defined the identity of a club, its supporters and, arguably, a city, that endures to this day; bringing to a crashing end an era in football never witnessed before or since.
As much about the history and heritage of football from a bygone age, PARIS 75 features rare and never-seen-before cine-footage taken by supporters who followed Leeds across Europe that season and exclusive home-video from Leeds United legend Paul Reaney; it is the story of female football supporting pioneers and early foreign travel, a film about football in the Seventies, with appeal to Leeds United fans and neutrals alike. It is a film for the fans told by the fans who were there – Roy, Carole, Rich, Margaret and Heidi; Leeds United and England legends, Paul Reaney and Allan Clarke, who played, and other key figures who witnessed that season and that final.
At a time when supporters have never felt so alienated and distanced from today’s supercar-driving, noise-cancelling players of today and the anonymous corporates who own their club, PARIS 75 is a timely reminder of what football used to be – the good and the bad.
‘Moving. Powerful. Magnificent!’ – Adam Pope, BBC Sport‘Moving. Powerful. Magnificent!’ – Adam Pope, BBC Sport
‘Brutal and Poignant.’ – Rick Broadbent, The Times
‘Burning with rage.’ – The Guardian
‘Enlightening and compelling.’ – Graham Smyth, Yorkshire Evening Post