Manchester United stars past and present were on hand to support Wayne Rooney at the premiere of the Red Devils icon's new Amazon Prime documentary.
Defenders Harry Maguire and Phil Jones, forward Marcus Rashford and club icon Bryan Robson, along with their partners, were among those to attend the premiere at Tony Wilson Place in Manchester on Wednesday evening.
Former United players Michael Carrick, Wes Brown, Jonny Evans and Phil Bardsley were also in attendance, as well as Rooney's current captain at Derby County, Curtis Davies.
Rooney and wife Coleen were also on the red carpet for the premiere of the film, which provides a warts-and-all take on the colourful career of one of English football's most famous faces of the past few years.
The film, which is released on Amazon Prime on Friday, explores Rooney's mental health struggles and battles with alcohol, while also revisiting his highs and lows on the pitch for Everton, United and Everton.
Speaking to Mirror Football before the launch of the documentary, Rooney said: "For a long period of my career, I was suffering inside. I found a way to deal with that; a lot of it ended up in drinking.
"Where I felt stuck, I couldn’t go into the training ground and say I’m struggling with this mentally, or struggling to deal with this on my own. I couldn’t go to the likes of Roy Keane or Ryan Giggs and tell them: ‘Listen, I’m struggling here.’
"It’s not something you did back then, whereas now it’s a lot easier to do that which is good because people are recognising the mental health issue and talking about it and trying to catch it early, especially with some of the young lads who are struggling with that.
"It was a mixture of everything: sometimes performance; sometimes off the pitch stuff; sometimes issues which I might have had with a club. It all builds up.
"The best way for me to deal with that - which was the wrong way - at the time, you’re just trying to deal with it, if I had a period of two days off then I would literally go in my house, on my own, and drink for two days."
Rooney says his issues off the pitch had a direct impact on his performances on it.
"When I was dealing with those issues, I was more raw on the pitch, more angry on the pitch and actually when I learned to deal with them, that went away because you are putting yourself in a better frame of mind as well," he added.
"So, I don’t know whether it would have seen me become a better player, play for longer. But it was part of my life, a part of my career.
"I’m happy with my career but there were moments where I struggled quite badly actually."
Rooney launches on Amazon Prime Video on Friday(Feb 11).