The sons of legendary manager Brian Clough have given their backing to a new film documenting the former Nottingham Forest boss' glory years at the City Ground.
"I Believe In Miracles" will premiere at the City Ground on October 11 and tells the story of Forest's mesmeric five-year rise under Clough, who took the club from Division Two strugglers to back-to-back European Cup winners.
The film, written, directed and produced by Jonny Owen, features interviews with every player from that triumphant Forest team as well as showing previously unseen footage of games and Clough from the time.
The 2009 film adaptation of David Peace's novel 'The Damned United' drew huge criticism from the Clough family, who were angered by the number of inaccuracies and emphasis placed on the drinking of Clough during his ill-fated 44-day spell in charge of Leeds United.
However, Nigel Clough and his brother Simon have given their seal of approval to Owen's film having been given their own private screening along with the family of Clough's assistant Peter Taylor.
"It's a great film about our father told perfectly by the people who knew him best. The players of his greatest ever side," Nigel and Simon Clough released in a joint statement to Sky Sports.
Taylor's daughter, Wendy, added: "Five of the best years of my life in 90 brilliant minutes."
Having seen the upset caused to the Clough family by Tom Hooper's adaptation of 'The Damned United', Owen says receiving the backing of both families was vital.
"It was essential to me to get the Clough and Taylor families support as it was about their fathers and no one knows them better than they did," he said.
"I often think, I wonder how I'd feel if someone did something about my Dad? So I showed it to them and they loved it.
"They said... 'you've got him exactly how he was. Funny, intelligent and with that special swagger that was unique to the man himself'. It was the moment when I thought, it's been worth everything."
I Believe In Miracles will preview in UK cinemas on October 13.