The Arizona Republic

WWE dreams turn real in ‘Fighting With My Family’

- Jake Coyle

Even the most eccentric passions of working-class England – long a favored reservoir of feel-good underdog tales – have seldom featured as much spandex as “Fighting With My Family.”

Patrick “Rowdy Ricky Knight” Bevis (Nick Frost) and Julia “Sweet Saraya” Bevis (Lena Headey) are your average parents, raising a couple of tykes in Norwich, England, to stand up for themselves, work together, and, you know, maintain a firm choke hold. Collective­ly they worship at the altar of “Macho Man” Randy Savage; they believe in body slams the way other families preach a heathy breakfast.

“Fighting With My Family,” the solo writing-directing debut of Stephen Merchant (“The Office”), is based on a

true story and a colorful documentar­y . Saraya-Jade (Florence Pugh) and her older brother, Zak (Jack Lowden), have been bred by their WWE-obsessed parents to leg-drop and pile-drive. They each aspire to the big time while ardent-

ly participat­ing in their family’s far more regional and ragtag wrestling business. In a sport/entertainm­ent full of skeptics, they’re true believers.

The twist in “Fighting With My Family” is not only that Saraya-Jade actually succeeds, winning a tryout with the WWE in Florida, but that this modest and formulaic sports movie takes on unexpected heavyweigh­t status. “Fighting With My Family” was made with the blessing and the branding of the WWE, and it includes plenty of pro wrestler cameos, most notably The Rock, who’s a producer on the film. It’s a little like if Barry Bonds turned up in “The Sandlot.”

Yet “Fighting With My Family” isn’t just about the quixotic small-town dreams of some hardscrabb­le devotees, but the leap into megawatt fame, and the strain it can put on family dynamics. When a wisecracki­ng trainer named Hutch (Vince Vaughn, eating it up) at a London tryout picks Saraya-Jade, who renames herself Paige, Zak is told he doesn’t have the “it” factor his sister exudes.

But Paige, darkhaired, lip-pierced and heavily accented, isn’t so sure of herself, either. “Do you see yourself as a sixinch action figure?” asks Hutch, a question that might be better served for mental institutio­n examinatio­ns. When Paige sees the other women trying to make it – models and cheerleade­rs, mostly – she feels even more uncertain. Hutch warns with ominous certainty: “Before you leave Orlando, at least one you will be a stripper.”

It’s a compelling and likable cast (Frost, in particular, is a standout), and Merchant keeps the film, for all its sportsmovi­e clichés, mostly lively, good-hearted and consistent­ly funny. That’s aided in part by the charm explosions that happen whenever The Rock steps in (he even manages a crack at Vin Diesel). But the movie is mostly on Pugh’s shoulders. The young actresses broke through, terrifical­ly, in 2017’s “Lady Macbeth,” which, ironically, was a far more rock-’emsock’em showcase for her considerab­le talent. Pugh never looks ease in the ring in “Fighting With My Family,” but her performanc­e is so layered with ambition and self-doubt that the film exceeds its familiar framework.

Still, the movie is best when furthest from the WWE main stage, back in the Bevis’ Norwich living room, where, for example, a more typically British visitor (played by Merchant) has the nerve to politely query, “Sorry, what is the WWE?” – and subsequent­ly suffers some of the most withering stares you’ll ever see. It turns out that the heart of the goofy soap opera that is profession­al wrestling is in Norwich.

 ?? METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PICTURES VIA AP PHOTOS ?? Lena Headey, left, and Nick Frost in a scene from "Fighting with My Family."
METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PICTURES VIA AP PHOTOS Lena Headey, left, and Nick Frost in a scene from "Fighting with My Family."
 ??  ?? Jack Lowden, left, and Florence Pugh in a scene from "Fighting with My Family."
Jack Lowden, left, and Florence Pugh in a scene from "Fighting with My Family."

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