Saipan is a 2025 sports film about the Republic of Ireland national football team and the eponymous Saipan incident between player Roy Keane and manager Mick McCarthy in the lead up to the 2002 FIFA World Cup. Steve Coogan and ÃÂanna Hardwicke star as McCarthy and Keane respectively.
In 1980, an eight year old Roy Keane plays football in a field in Cork. Years later, he has risen to stardom, but has taken time off following claims of an injury.
In December 2001, in Barnsley, an interviewer discusses the upcoming sporting event with Mick McCarthy, who decides he should go to Tehran to see the Irish team.
In April 2002, Keane travels to Dublin to go with the Irish team to Saipan, but on the plane, he discusses the game with McCarthy and implies his frustration with the lack of preparation. Upon arrival, Keane is immediately appalled by the poor quality of the hotel and the lack of proper food, which is reflected by his anti-social behaviour.
In a morning meeting, McCarthy informs the team that there has been an error in supply delivery. This, along with the training pitch's poor condition, causes Keane to confront McCarthy in a sauna. McCarthy is later called by several questioners where his coaching is questioned due to his English origin, where he counteracts by stating a difference between "men from Ireland and Irish men".
Eleven days before the match, Keane plays a practice game and insults some of the managers present. The next day, Keane complains to McCarthy and some of the players for taking time-off after an hour, and storms off. Later that night, he asks McCarthy to go home for "personal problems", but changes his mind the next day.
However, eight days before the match, it is revealed that Keane leaked his true thoughts to a reporter while drunk, who then sold the story to the news. When McCarthy calls for a team meeting to discuss the matter, Keane insists he did nothing wrong. McCarthy accuses Keane of faking his injury, who admits to McCarthy that he thinks that the Irish team have become a joke due to his coaching and that he doesn't "rate him as a person". This, as well as numerous insults, leads McCarthy to fire Keane.
On the 23rd of May, Keane returns home, with mixed reactions. In Tokyo, the team watches an interview of Keane, who admits that he does not regret leaving. On the 29th, McCarthy calls Keane and asks him if he wants to come back. Keane refuses.
In a title sequence, it is revealed that Ireland lost to penalties to Spain after reaching the last 16 teams in the 2002 World Cup. Back in Manchester, Keane plays football alone, reminiscing on the times he played football as a child in 1980.
The film is directed by Glenn Leyburn and Lisa Barros DâÂÂSa from a script by Paul Fraser. It is produced by Macdara Kelleher and John Keville for Wild Atlantic Pictures along with Trevor Birney and Oliver Butler for Fine Point Films. It is made in association with FÃÂs ÃÂireann/Screen Ireland and Northern Ireland Screen. Paul Fraser described the script "as two impossibly complicated egos unwilling to step down and look at the consequences".
In July 2024, Steve Coogan and ÃÂanna Hardwicke were cast in the roles of Ireland manager Mick McCarthy and Ireland captain Roy Keane. Jack Hickey joined the cast as Niall Quinn the following month. Harriet Cains was cast as Keane's wife Theresa.
Coogan told Patrick Kielty on the Late Late Show that he had "a chat" with Mick McCarthy before portraying him, saying he "wanted to make sure that if I was going to take part in it, it was a balanced depiction". When Coogan spoke to McCarthy over the phone prior to filming, McCarthy recalled ringing Keane on the eve of the World Cup, a detail which became a late addition to the script.
Principal photography began in Belfast in August 2024. Filming also took place in Carlingford, County Louth.
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Saipan holds an approval rating of 90% from 29 reviews.
In September 2025, the film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and film was favourably reviewed by The Guardian and described as âÂÂthe rare football movie thatâÂÂs worth a replay.âÂÂ
Damon Wise for Deadline calls the film a "surprisingly profound soccer comedy."
Robbie Collin in The Daily Telegraph commented that Coogan played McCarthy "subtly" and the film was "most entertaining when it simply pits Coogan and Hardwicke against each other as two strains of modern Irish manhood at war", providing "a watchable national identity crisis in microcosm".
Phil de Semlyn in Time Out awarded the film four stars but questioned whether McCarthy was unfairly shown as a "cowed" figure akin to a "supply teacher" but noted the film was not aiming for "strict reconstruction so much as an exploration of the tensions within the Irish psyche".
Evelyn O'Rourke for RTàpraised the performances of Harriet Cairns as Theresa Keane, as well as Coogan and Hardwicke who are "authentic⦠never cartoonish" and also praised the "delicious archive" footage and the soundtrack with "much-loved anthems" from the era.
In The Irish Independent, Chris Wasser said that the film elicits sympathy for both Keane and McCarthy and does "well to condense a sensational real-life melodrama into a competent big-screen tragicomedy" with Hardwicke's "complex and convincing interpretation" the "undeniable star of the show". In the same publication, Paul Kimmage questioned the ethics of using real life characters and names in a fictionalised way, giving the "veneer of a documentary â news reports and radio reports and newspaper reports from the time" whilst being a work of fiction, highlighting that "Keane never said anything about Mick McCarthyâÂÂs Irishness" in reality.
Tony Cascarino, who played for Ireland alongside both Keane and McCarthy wrote in The Times that he "enjoyed the film as a piece of entertainment", praising "superb" Hardwicke, but acknowledged it as "not a completely accurate representation of either manâÂÂ, with McCarthy "far tougher" than depicted and never criticised by Keane for not being Irish. Cascarino also noted that the "idea that the Saipan trip was a massive jolly for the players is also exaggerated", with professional standards risen within the team by 2002 from the early 1990s.
Ken Early in The Irish Times said it was "frustrating to think a new audience might assume the fake parts of the film's account are true". In the same publication, former player Kevin Kilbane who was part of the squad in 2002, criticised the depiction of the team's "fictionalised partying", commenting that the film "unfairly portrayedâ Niall Quinn, and that both Fiona and Mick McCarthy were also given a disservice with McCarthy, far from being cowed, delivering the ultimatum that "either you go or I go, and I am going nowhere". Kilbane also noted the height difference between Coogan and McCarthy, saying that âÂÂRoy didnâÂÂt loom over Mick. Nobody did.âÂÂ
The film was released first in preview screenings in Ireland on 26 December 2025, before going into general release on 1 January. The film was later released in the United Kingdom on 23 January 2026 by Vertigo Releasing.
In January 2026, the film received 12 nominations at the Irish Film & Television Awards, including for best film and best director, with Coogan and Hardwicke both nominated for best lead actor. Hardwicke eventually won best lead actor.