Call & Times

In Guadagnino’s ‘Challenger­s,’ Zendaya plays tennis

- Ty Burr

Is there a greater spectator sport than watching fresh talents – whether athletes or actors – come into their own? The slick, sexy, hugely entertaini­ng tennis romantic triangle “Challenger­s” offers the high of three young performers at the top of their games under the guidance of Luca Guadagnino, a director who gives them room to swing in all senses of the word. The movie’s a paean to hard work and hedonism, and if its pleasures are mostly surface – grass, clay, emotional – it’s still been too long since we’ve had an intelligen­t frolic like this.

Justin Kuritzkes’s ingenious screenplay is structured around a single tennis match in 2019 between top-seeded superstar Art Donaldson (Mike Faist) and tournament-circuit bum Patrick Zweig (Josh O’Connor), with flashbacks that slowly fill in a complicate­d backstory. Each time we return to that central game, our understand­ing of the players and the stakes has completely changed, so if you want the movie to properly uncork all its surprises, come back to this review after you’ve come home from the theater. I’d stay away from the film’s trailer, while you’re at it.

(We pause while readers decide what to do and to protect them from the next paragraph.)

That 2019 match is the endgame in a decade-plus friendship/rivalry/bromance between Art and Patrick, with Tashi Duncan (Zendaya) as the fulcrum around which they pivot. Tashi is many things to both men over the years – goddess, lover, coach, wife – but in the star’s steely performanc­e, she’s her own woman first.

The earliest flashbacks find the guys as scruffy best friends from the tennis academy, not remotely ready for the pros, while

Tashi is a teenage court sensation – the next Serena, Steffi, Martina all rolled into one. The sneaker deals are already in place when Art and Patrick woo her away from a post-win party to a boozy evening of hoped-for rival or mutual seduction. What ensues is steamy, surprising and ultimately very funny, and never once do you doubt that Tashi is running the show.

Then an unforeseen event takes her out of a playing career into coaching, and the dynamics among the three shift again. And again, and again, as Art ascends to tournament royalty, Patrick hits the skids, and Tashi lays bets both long-term and short – on each man and her own best interests. “Challenger­s” is as close to a melodramat­ic three-way as you can legally get, with all concerned parties simultaneo­usly and interchang­eably loving, hating, schtupping, gaslightin­g, goading and manipulati­ng one another. Think “Jules and Jim” (1962) with a wicked backhand and a soupçon of homoerotic­ism. The movie’s true to the world of profession­al sports in that tennis doesn’t function here as a metaphor for sex – the sex is a metaphor for tennis. Everything is.

Guadagnino is the Italian director of “I Am Love” (2009), “A Bigger Splash” (2015) and “Call Me by Your Name” (2017), all three swooning with a distinctly European sensuality regarding food and sex and life’s rich banquet. He makes tennis a turn-on here, too, abetted by Sayombhu Mukdeeprom’s nimble cinematogr­aphy (which needle-drops an homage to a famous courtside shot from Hitchcock’s “Strangers on a Train” at exactly the right moment), Marco Costa’s split-second editing, and a sinuous score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross – one of their best to date. I don’t know what actual tennis planyedrs will think of “Challenger­s,” and I don’t think we should care, because Guadagnino gives us movie tennis, a thrillingl­y kinetic contact sport where the volleys sound like cannon fire.

Similarly, Zendaya might strike you as not physically imposing enough to earn Tashi’s college-circuit nickname “the Duncanator,” but the actress dominates the film as she dominates Art’s and Patrick’s lives, with the kind of backhand – on the court and in her compliment­s – that can bring a grown man to his knees. Faist fully delivers on the promise of his shoulda-been-nominated turn as Riff in the 2021 “West Side Story” remake: He makes Art an adorable nice guy with a killer streak that appears when you least expect it. O’Connor, best known as the young Prince Charles on two seasons of “The Crown,” is convincing­ly American and convincing­ly a dog, always looking for a way to one-up Art and win over Tashi.

But it’s Zendaya’s show, and while she has proved herself as a Disney kid and a taboo-breaking HBO series lead, as Spider-Man’s girlfriend and a ferocious Fremen warrior who’s still the hero’s girlfriend, “Challenger­s” is the first big-screen movie in which she holds down the center with that furiously knitted brow. (She’s one of those actresses who rarely smiles, but when she does, it’s a cataclysm.) The movie’s also satisfying­ly in tune with a handful of classic threesome romances, from “Design for Living” (1933) through “Jules and Jim,” where it’s clear the woman is a master of 3D chess while the guys are stuck playing Pokémon.

Three and one-half stars. Rated R. At theaters. Language throughout, some sexual content and graphic nudity. 131 minutes.

Rating guide: Four stars masterpiec­e, three stars very good, two stars okay, one star poor, no stars waste of time.

 ?? Niko Tavernise/Amazon/Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures ?? Mike Faist and Zendaya play a rising tennis star and his coach in director Luca Guadagnino’s “Challenger­s.”
Niko Tavernise/Amazon/Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures Mike Faist and Zendaya play a rising tennis star and his coach in director Luca Guadagnino’s “Challenger­s.”

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