The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

i, tonya (15) Dir. Craig Gillespie

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Get your skates on for a winning ice-skate-em-up which delves behind the scenes of one of the most notorious incidents in sporting history. Olympic U.S. ice skater Tonya Harding (Margot Robbie) became infamous for supposedly having her rival Nancy Kerrigan attacked back in 1994. I Tonya gives a fascinatin­g, darkly amusing and engaging insight into the lives of Harding and those around her in the lead up to the attack and details the fallout afterwards too. You really don’t need to be an ice skating fan to enjoy the mockumenta­ry style director Craig ‘Lars and the Real Girl’ Gillespie has employed. The story crackles with memorable dialogue and winning scenes that satires the media hungry response and the personal implosion that wrecked Harding’s career. The Kerrigan-Harding affair is presented with much speculatio­n and many possibly inaccurate recollecti­ons. Kicking off with a young Tonya (played by Mckenna Grace) who yearns to be an ice skater – if only as a distractio­n from her painful broken home life. Her mother is the abusive, totally driven LaVona Goldman (Allison Janney – who just won a Bafta for her role), she might not like Tonya skating, but also doesn’t want her to be anything but the best. By the time Margot Robbie takes over as Harding, her talent is getting her into competitio­ns, but because of her poor redneck background - which means she must make her own costumes - the snobby judges won’t acknowledg­e her skills. Everything changes when Harding becomes the first American woman to land a triple axel and her star finally begins to rise. But at the same time things begin to fall apart as her stupid, controllin­g boyfriend / husband and his even more idiotic friend make plans to intimidate her competitio­n. The film makes Harding out to have a heart, and shows her as actually a sort of a victim of her circumstan­ces. I came away with much more respect and it will certainly make you consider the situation she found herself in, her terrible life, and the ongoing repercussi­ons from the Kerrigan attack. Robbie is superb as Harding, making what could have been a boo hiss villain into a flawed human worth taking time to understand. Her mother however is portrayed as just evil and as for the men in her life, they are entirely bad news. In the end, I Tonya shows that you may not need to have class when you have talent, but escaping your environmen­t is another story.

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