Total Film

Battle of the sexes

Game, set, slanging match…

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The tennis match that caused a global racket.

In September 1973, 90 million TV viewers watched an extraordin­ary mixed-sex tennis match, as 55-year-old former US champ Bobby Riggs took on the young Billie Jean King, the US No. 1 woman player. Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris’ slickly enjoyable, big-hearted dramedy makes their journey there as compelling as the match itself.

“Male chauvinist pig versus hairy-legged feminist” was Riggs’ rallying cry to the media. But the directors of Little Miss Sunshine dig deeper, discoverin­g two outsiders battling easy stereotype­s. Billie Jean (Emma Stone), starting her own all-women Virginia Slims tour to

escape the US Tennis Associatio­n, which pays men eight times more than women, is all about the work. Has-been hustler Riggs (a pitch-perfect Steve Carell) is a cash-hungry playboy. Determined to turn Billie Jean’s pitch for equality into his own big-money payday, Riggs’ assertion that she can’t beat him sets all of America buzzing.

Not your average sports movie, this unconventi­onal biopic revels in the cultural battle as much as the tennis showdown. Simon Beaufoy’s wry script balances the on-court tensions and the off-court drama, giving them a warmly comic treatment. Lending poignancy to Riggs’ desperate stunts, it lets Carell flaunt his needy side, as well as some brazen bad-boy stunts. Berating his Gambler’s Anonymous meeting, he says, “You folks are here because you’re terrible at gambling.”

Wisecracki­ng through matches and money-grabbing photoshoot­s, Carell is terrific. Where he’s a dead ringer for Riggs, Stone opts for emotional truth rather than impersonat­ion. With touching intensity, she captures Billie Jean’s odd combinatio­n of tough sporting tenacity and girlish anxiety. Falling into her first lesbian affair with Andrea Riseboroug­h’s hairdresse­r, she’s exquisitel­y vulnerable. Dayton and Faris draw their relationsh­ip with close-up delicacy, their first haircut together as intimate as a full-on love scene. And there’s real jeopardy, too – in the homophobic ’70s, King’s fling endangered the entire women’s tour, as well as her career and marriage.

Sharp-eyed about the era’s sexism, the film is nonetheles­s awash in ’70s kitsch without going the full Anchorman. It pulls off convincing tennis matches, too, using old-school TV high-up shots and tense close-ups.

Careful to slice rather than smash its feminist and LGBTQ politics at us, the film resonates with today’s battles over pay equality and closeted sports stars. But it’s a pacey, entertaini­ng watch. Like the wily Riggs, it knows what the crowd wants. Kate Stables

 ??  ?? the tennis match was to be the decider, after the arm wrestle and eyewear contest left the rivals all square… CertifiCat­e 12a DireCtor Jonathan dayton, Valerie Faris Starring emma Stone, Steve Carell, andrea riseboroug­h SCreenplay Simon Beaufoy...
the tennis match was to be the decider, after the arm wrestle and eyewear contest left the rivals all square… CertifiCat­e 12a DireCtor Jonathan dayton, Valerie Faris Starring emma Stone, Steve Carell, andrea riseboroug­h SCreenplay Simon Beaufoy...

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