Regina Leader-Post

Fine cast makes I, Tonya into a true guilty pleasure

I, Tonya cast brings Olympic performanc­es to this wonderfull­y made guilty pleasure

- CHRIS KNIGHT

With the possible exception of Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, you won’t find a more guilty pleasure at the movies this season. A pleasure because Steven Rogers’ screenplay about the events surroundin­g the 1994 attack on figure skater Nancy Kerrigan is genuinely funny. And guilty because, well, Kerrigan.

Margot Robbie plays Tonya Harding with a gleam of madness in her eye. Harding was innocent of what everyone in the movie refers to as “the incident.” That is, she didn’t swing the telescopic baton that injured Kerrigan. But her role in the attack — which involved her husband, her selfprocla­imed bodyguard, and a couple of goons who did the actual legwork — earned her a lifetime ban from profession­al skating.

Robbie is amazing in the role, but the main attraction is Allison Janney as Tonya’s mother, LaVona. With her salty language and parakeet perched her shoulder, she looks like a pirate’s grandmothe­r. She’s a piece of work, whereas everyone else in the film is a piece of ... something else.

Sebastian Stan plays Jeff Gillooly, Tonya’s redneck husband. Paul Walter Hauser is Shawn Eckhardt, who fancies himself a counter-terrorist expert and bodyguard, but whose bat cave is his mom’s basement. Bobby Cannavale plays Martin Maddox, a reporter for Hard Copy, the quintessen­ce of ’90s tabloid TV. And Julianne Nicholson is Diane Rawlinson, Tonya’s coach.

It’s a larger-than-life ensemble, and feels at times as if director Craig Gillespie gave each of his actors the same instructio­n — elbow your way to the front of this movie.

When Tonya’s mom first approaches the coach about taking on a new student, Diane asks how old this pipsqueak skater is. “She’s a soft four,” LaVona replies cagily. By the time the movie’s over, she’ll be a hard 23.

Tonya is also a hard case. Raised poor — I think we’re meant to believe her first fur coat was made of rabbits she shot herself — she consistent­ly argues with skating judges over what she perceives as unfair treatment. She fights with Jeff about everything, even snacks. She even argues with the audience, accusing us of being part of the problem that drove her to infamy. And she doesn’t merely break the fourth wall — in one scene, she shoots it.

But despite all this, there are moments where you can’t help but root for her. In 1991, at the U.S. nationals, she became the first American woman and only the second female in history to land a triple axel. The lead-up carries with it all the beats of the classic sports-movie climax, although it must be said that most underdog victories don’t end with a “f--- you.”

Things begin their real downward spiral soon afterward. Tonya receives a death threat at a practice rink, which gets Jeff thinking that maybe Kerrigan should get one, too — and then Shawn picks up the ball and runs with it, past the end-zone of illegality, and into history.

It helps that Kerrigan wasn’t permanentl­y disabled by the attack. She placed second in the Olympics a month later, while Harding managed only a dismal eighth.

So if comedy is tragedy plus time, and that time is now pushing 25 years, and the tragedy wasn’t that huge to begin with — well, you’ve got to laugh. Good luck trying not to.

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