All three of the films I have analysed are in almost the exact same genre. Each one focuses on football, fighting and of course hooliganism. The casting for all three of the films is again almost identical. The main characters are Jack the lad cockney look a likes. And along with this there is a disproportionate amount of shaven headed thugs running around, popping in and out of fight scenes.
As for costume, this can vary depending on where the football team is from. Some of the football firms choose to wear nice, but still chavvy clothing such a burberry hats. Others choose full tracksuits, but the most noticeable of all attires is the main character in green street. This man wears a trench coat with a tracksuit underneath.
The setting for each film again is quite similar, set in various big cits known for football violence. All films feature London and most away games to teams such as Manchester united, set in Manchester. All the fight scenes are either in city centres, for example the opening scene to Green Street in London, deserted wasteland like in Rise of the Footsoldier after they disembark a train. And finally near pubs that the football firms use as a base of operations.
Green Street's plot is about a young American university goer who stumbles into a world of excitement, drinking, fighting and of course football. His life is transformed, and he feels alive. Matt Buckner the American student ends up being one of the top members of the Green Street Elite (the westham football firm). All is well and he loves the football and the fighting until things get serious and another football firm ambushes them and almost kills some of the GSE. This makes things real for the firm and they decide to have one last fight to end it all, in this fight the leader of the GSE is killed whilst luring the opposite firm away from Matt Buckners family who have turned up to "save" him.
Rise of the Footsoldier's plot is very interesting, and follows a young, headstrong Carlton Leach as a footsoldier in the ranks of the ICF. He eventually leaves football hooliganism but stay well within the criminal world, and going a more serious criminal gang. He works his way up through this seedy underworld and becomes one of the most feared criminals in the country.
The Football Factory follows the boring life of Tommy Johnson who hates his boring life and uses the football fighting as an escape. Tommy gets badly beaten, and starts to wonder if its all really worth it. In the end he decides that it is. Tommy gets arrested and beaten, wins some, loses some, but carries on fighting with the firm hroughout.
The music in all three films is always building up to some sort of climax. It adds to the xcitment and pinical of the fights.