Given the film's synopsis, I expected Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' sports biopic Battle of the Sexes
to be about tennis. Specifically, I anticipated it being about the
highly-publicized 1973 exhibition match between female tennis sensation
Billie Jean King (Emma Stone) and former tennis champ Bobby Riggs (Steve
Carell).
It's not. I mean, Battle of the Sexes
does gradually build to the staging of this groundbreaking competition,
an event that still to this day holds the distinction of being the
largest audience to watch a tennis match in the United States (an
estimated 90 million viewed the match worldwide, with 30,472 in the
Houston Astrodome to witness it live). But tennis is a virtual
afterthought in this movie -- there's a shocking lack of actual tennis
being played on screen -- while Dayton and Faris focus, instead, on the
melodramatic personal developments in the lives of the two lead
characters at their disposal. Battle of the Sexes wants us to
understand King and Riggs off the court, as people. The match they
finally play against each other is essentially inconsequential to the
point of this story.
And in the larger context, Battles of the Sexes is the story of Billie Jean King, who was facing numerous "conflicts" off the court that are, tangentially, tied to her status as the world's top female tennis player at the time. The movie begins with the 29-year-old King (Stone) wining three Grand Slam singles titles, proving her dominance over her chosen sport. However, King and her fellow female pro players remain at odds with Jack Kramer (Bill Pullman) and the chauvinistic execs in the world tennis association, who favor male players and refuse to offer women equal prize money. Backed by some of the country's top female players, Billie Jean branches out and forms her own competition circuit, making both hay and headlines as they take their show on the road.
It's on the road that King meets, and
gradually falls for, Marilyn Barnett (Andrea Riseborough), a California
hairstylist who drops everything and begins following Billie Jean as she
travels from tournament to tournament. The problem? Billie Jean King
was married at the time to Larry King (Austin Stowell), so in addition
to fighting for equality on the pro circuit and wrestling with her
romantic entanglements in the roadside motels of the new ladies' tennis
circuit, King was also watching her game slip because her focus on
actual tennis was wavering.
There's more than enough rich material in this
fertile chapter of Billie Jean King's personal and professional
biography to sustain a feature film (read up on the repercussions of
King's outing as a lesbian after you leave Battle), but this also means that Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) gets short-changed by Battle of the Sexes...
despite the fact that his side of the story is equally compelling. A
gambling addict, Riggs appeared to miss the limelight that used to come
with his tennis success. When a cronie plants the spark of a marketing
idea in Bobby's head that he'd make a fortune by returning to the courts
to play the world's top female tennis athlete, Riggs can't let it go.
He embraces the sideshow that becomes the pursuit to stage the Battle of
the Sexes. But he also juggles a deteriorating marriage to Priscilla
Wheelan (Elisabeth Shue), for reasons that are hardly touched on in this
film.
Battle of the Sexes might have been
better if it focused intently on one or two of these important issues.
By tackling all of them, it shoulders too large of a load, and appears
to give the Cliff's Notes version of some significant chapters in Billie
Jean King's history. Stone and Carell are good in their roles, though
they don't share the screen until the picture's end, so it's as if
they're operating in two disconnected stories that marry almost
accidentally. And the film takes a safe, soft approach to complicated
topics of sexism in the pro-sports arena, the sacrifices one takes to be
the best in any chosen profession, and the repercussions of trying to
live life in the afterglow of global success.
While not quite toothless, Battle of the Sexes
is, at best, a light volley of banter and debate over important topics,
rather than a hard-hitting expose with contemporary ties to ongoing
gender discussions (which it easily could have been). It does an
admirable job of explaining how and why then "battle" between Billie
Jean King and Bobby Riggs was bigger than the actual match. But in the
end, it'll be remembered as being a movie about several important
topics, rather than being an important movie in and of itself.
Read more >> Gerald’s Game Review & Trailer
Read more >> Gerald’s Game Review & Trailer
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