Cinematic Releases: Challengers (2024) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios

Italian Call Me By Your Name director Luca Guadagnino in the last few years took a stab at horror with his 2018 remake of Dario Argento’s Suspiria followed by his post-COVID cannibal romantic thriller Bones and All in 2022.  Showing an enormous amount of confidence when it came to fearlessly diving into transgression before mixing his romantic past with his newfound horror present, Guadagnino very quickly reestablished himself as an uncompromising provocateur ready for anything unafraid to push his audiences into uncomfortable arenas while remaining fully devoted to the dynamic arcs of his characters.  Moreover, not since the heyday of Wong Kar-Wai has a European director had such a keen omnisexual regard for both his stories and the people living in them. 
 
Immediately following Bones and All Guadagnino teamed up with American playwright Justin Kuritzkes, the husband of Past Lives director Celine Song, and the newly formed twosome concocted perhaps the sexiest tennis movie ever put forth before cameras.  Despite being delayed for about a year due to the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers comes to theaters in one of the year’s most electric triangular romantic dramas.  

Told in a time-jumping non-linear structure that can be dizzying initially but serves an emotional and thematic purpose, Challengers tells the tale of former tennis prodigy Tashi Duncan (Zendaya) who after suffering a debilitating injury turns to coaching her champion husband Art Donaldson (Mike Faist).  Intending to redeem his loser reputation, Tashi and Art’s plans are complicated by the arrival of challenger Patrick Zweig, Art’s former best friend and Tashi’s former lover. 
 
Though the premise of the film flirts with the notion of the mé·nage à trois, hinted at seductively in the trailers, Challengers is perhaps (in addition to being a return to form) Guadagnino’s most technically proficient and artistically challenging work to date.  Full of stunning camerawork and editing designed to present the tennis game like we’ve never seen before including an extraordinary sequence of the perspective of the tennis ball itself being bounced back and forth between the court.  

Lensed exquisitely by Sayombhu Mukdeeprom who shot Guadagnino’s previous three films and brilliantly edited by Marco Costa, the film does astounding visual feats aided by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’ positively pulsating score.  Honestly the silver screen has never seen or hear the tennis game quite like this before and at times in the Dolby Cinema you felt as if you might get struck by the ball itself.

 
Zendaya, a co-producer on the film alongside Guadagnino and former Sony Pictures chairwoman Amy Pascal, gives after the Dune movies perhaps her most complete and physical performance.  In an already demanding role, Zendaya spent three months training with professional tennis coach Brad Gilbert and the results are quite fierce.  First there’s the tennis sequences themselves which are filmed like a fight with Zendaya attacking the arena like a feral animal.  


Then you have her go-getting ferocity which sometimes comes out in sequences of her just glaring at the camera with eyes glowering up from underneath Kubrick style.  Josh O’Connor I was familiar with from his work on the Netflix series The Crown as the prickly Prince Charles and here he more than rises to the occasion as a smitten best friend turned sworn mortal enemy.  Mike Faist, still a bit of a newcomer in bit parts like the remake of West Side Story, gets his first real leading role here as the former best friend turned arch-rival.

 
Far more sexy than outright sexual despite some tense scenes, Challengers as a piece of character-driven storytelling and dazzling technical filmmaking to see and hear in a theater setting is something of a summer romantic triangular delight.  Engrossing and compelling from start to finish even as its loopy timeline can throw some viewers off, the film starts out with the feel of a thriller and though it is ostensibly a romantic drama, so much is at stake here that it threatens to eat all three characters alive.  


Guadagnino is a new master storyteller to go out of your way to the cinema for featuring some of Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’ best work in recent memory, terrific performances from Zendaya, Josh O’Connor and Mike Faist and this is easily one of the year’s most unexpected pleasures.  Word on the street is Guadagnino is looking to adapt William S. Burroughs next so stay tuned!  One of the great new directors to really watch for.

--Andrew Kotwicki