Mike McCahill 

Building Jerusalem review – how rugby union kicked off a new era

Documentary-maker James Erskine uncovers the human stories behind the rejuvenation of English rugby that led to World Cup victory
  
  

Jonny Wilkinson raises his arms after England beat Australia in the 2003 Rugby World Cup final.
Jonny Wilkinson raises his arms after England beat Australia in the 2003 Rugby World Cup final. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

The latest sports doc from the industrious James Erskine zeroes in on that mid-90s moment when English rugby union was converted from hidebound amateur pursuit to the better organised proposition that carried home the 2003 World Cup.

Again, Erskine’s broadly conventional method involves informed talking heads casting light on carefully sourced archive: bluff warrior Martin Johnson represents the old school, pensive Jonny Wilkinson the new wave. Yet he’s becoming more adept at juggling the micro (analysis of coach Clive Woodward’s myriad one-yard gains) with the macro (discussing the mixed bag of Murdoch money) and retains his knack for uncovering the human stories behind these gamechangers: Johnson’s excitement at receiving a free mobile from sponsors soon subsided when he realised nobody else had one to call.

Wilkinson’s dropkick against the Wallabies is the payoff, but Erskine sees there’s something both instructive and inspiring in rewinding the play and detailing the foundations that permitted such elevation.

 

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