San Diego Union-Tribune

‘KING RICHARD’ SERVES STORY WELL

WILL SMITH HITS THE MARK IN PORTRAYAL OF FATHER OBSESSED WITH RAISING TENNIS CHAMPIONS

- BY MOIRA MACDONALD Macdonald writes for The Seattle Times.

There’s a lovely pair of sounds that you hear throughout “King Richard,” Reinaldo Marcus Green’s endearing film about the upbringing of tennis champions Venus and Serena Williams: a thwock, of a tennis ball perfectly meeting a racket’s strings, and a gasp, from the hardworkin­g athlete swinging that racket.

The film is full of tennis matches that feel thrilling, even to viewers who aren’t tennis fans, and those two noises become the jazz of its soundtrack; a constant reminder of the effort and precision required by this sport, and of how satisfying a perfectly placed tennis shot can be.

But “King Richard” isn’t just a sports movie, though it’s a very good one; at its old-school heart, it’s about a family with a dream. Richard Williams (Will Smith) was a man obsessed with the idea of raising his two youngest daughters, Venus (Saniyya Sidney) and Serena (Demi Singleton), as tennis champions.

With the support of his wife, Oracene (Aunjanue Ellis), and their three other daughters, Richard trained Venus and Serena tirelessly on the public court near their modest home in Compton and talked up their skills to anyone who would listen, even printing up and distributi­ng a promotiona­l brochure.

A security guard by night, by day “I’m in the champion-raising business,” he says, and he won’t take no for an answer. “You are the most stubborn person I’ve met in my life,” says Paul Cohen (Tony Goldwyn), the girls’ first profession­al coach, “and I’ve coached McEnroe.”

Though we’re shown at least one neighbor who raised eyebrows at Richard’s methods (the girls practiced every day, even in the pouring rain), the movie clearly comes down on the side of Richard as loving father, inspiratio­nal coach and dedicated family man. (The real-life Venus and Serena lent their names to the film as

executive producers, after waiting to see the final product.)

Smith, in a terrific performanc­e, plays him as a man who wears constant chatter as a jacket; a charmer who knows he’s right and will walk through whatever fire is necessary to prove it; and a husband and

father who lights up in the presence of his girls.

And those girls are indeed a light: Sidney and Singleton show giggly chemistry as sisters and coltish joy on the tennis courts.

Just try not to smile at a scene in which Sidney’s Venus, after winning a key match, stares at herself in the mirror and busts out a grin as big as the arena.

“King Richard,” though perhaps a tad overlong, is as irresistib­le as the young legends at its center; you watch with pleasure, thinking of the many future champions it might inspire.

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES PHOTOS VIA AP ?? Will Smith as Richard Williams coaches Demi Singleton (playing Serena Williams) and Saniyya Sidney (Venus Williams).
WARNER BROS. PICTURES PHOTOS VIA AP Will Smith as Richard Williams coaches Demi Singleton (playing Serena Williams) and Saniyya Sidney (Venus Williams).
 ?? ?? Aunjanue Ellis portrays Oracene “Brandy” Williams, the mother of the Williams sisters, in “King Richard.”
Aunjanue Ellis portrays Oracene “Brandy” Williams, the mother of the Williams sisters, in “King Richard.”

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