post_page_cover

‘Challengers’ Review — Zendaya Is Remarkable in Luca Guadagnino’s Movie

Apr 12, 2024


The Big Picture

Challengers
is a love triangle set in the world of tennis, featuring three of Hollywood’s best up-and-comers.
The film delves into the characters’ pasts to explain their futures, exploring relationships and hidden scars.
Zendaya delivers a powerful performance, while the film blends tension, sexuality, and storytelling seamlessly.

On the surface, Challengers looks like the most conventional and straightforward film of Luca Guadagnino’s career. Coming off the horror-romance Bones and All, the coming-of-age TV miniseries We Are Who We Are, and the bonkers update of Dario Argento with Suspiria, Challengers almost seems quaint in comparison. Frankly, a love/lust triangle set in the world of tennis starring three of Hollywood’s best up-and-comers doesn’t scream “Luca Guadagnino.” However, in a way, Challengers almost feels like a throwback to Guadagnino’s pre-Call Me by Your Name work, with films like I Am Love and A Bigger Splash, which wholly relied on the dynamics between its characters, their romantic entanglements within, and the internal machinations of these characters. It’s also one of the twistiest, most compelling, and nonstop horniest films of Guadagnino’s career—which is truly saying something.

Challengers Follows three players who knew each other when they were teenagers as they compete in a tennis tournament to be the world-famous grand slam winner, and reignite old rivalries on and off the court.Release Date April 26, 2024 Cast Zendaya , Josh O’Connor , Mike Faist

What Is ‘Challengers’ About?
Despite seeming like a story about a love triangle, Challengers begins with Tashi (Zendaya), a promising tennis player turned coach, with her husband Art (Mike Faist), who is a Grand Slam champion in the middle of a losing streak. To boost Art’s confidence, Tashi signs her husband up for a lower-ranking Challenger tournament (sponsored by Phil’s Tire Town, no less), thinking that a few easy wins might help him in this rut. However, also at this event is Patrick (Josh O’Connor), who used to be Art’s doubles partner and Tashi’s ex-boyfriend. As these two compete against each other for the first time in years, we look back at what led up to this match and the relationships that still have an impact on all three of these tennis players.

Early on, Guadagnino’s camera gets extremely close to the bodies of our three characters, showing the scars that each of them wears from years of play. Tashi has a vertical scar running up her knee, while Art has several dings on his arms that we assume are from years of high-competition tennis. From there, Guadagnino pulls back the curtain to see the scars that they still have to struggle with inside, the loves, the losses, the pains, and the missed opportunities that made them who they are today. To Tashi, this might be a story about tennis and what it takes to win, but for Art, Patrick, and us, we know this is about much deeper scars that don’t heal quite as easily.

Guadagnino, working with an excellent script by Justin Kuritzkes, unfurls the past to explain the future. Challengers soon goes back thirteen years, as we see these three as exciting new athletes. Art and Patrick are best friends, even known as Fire & Ice by many, who both are drawn to Tashi’s incredible tennis gifts and her beauty. The first time they watch her play, the rest of the crowd moves their heads back and forth between players, but Art and Patrick can’t take their eyes off her. As they both set their sights on Tashi, her focus remains on tennis, and she’ll do what it takes to watch some “good fucking tennis,” as she puts it. Whether or not she’s interested in these two players, or if she wants to pit them against each other to get that “good fucking tennis” going is part of what makes Challengers so exciting to watch throughout.

‘Challengers’ Love Triangle Excels Because of Its Three Lead Performances
Image via Amazon MGM Studios

This is quite possibly Zendaya’s finest performance so far, one that allows her to be powerful, sexy, and a puppet master of sorts—all in equal measure. She knows the influence she has and utilizes it in every scene. While Art and Patrick don’t hide their intentions, clearly motivated more by what’s in their pants than their tennis skill, Tashi keeps her feelings close to the chest, and that inability to read her in most situations makes her a fascinating character to behold. As a tennis player, she knows she’s great and has her future lined up for her, but when that tremendous career is taken away from her in a moment, she employs this power in an entirely different fashion. She still has long-term goals, she just has to use manipulation and careful strategy to achieve them. In every scene, we’re right there alongside Art and Patrick, trying to decode what she’s really trying to do, and Zendaya plays this role with brilliance and grace.

It’s also a delight to see Faist and O’Connor in this form, with performances that are playful and unbelievably horny. They’re so much fun to watch together in their early scenes as kids, and as we see this relationship transform over their careers, they are also able to present the complicated feelings they have towards each other and Tashi with that same level of excitement and intensity. While this is a love triangle, it’s also probably more about the love that these two share for each other, and whether or not that love is entirely platonic is up for discussion.

Related While You Wait for the Zendaya-led Sports Drama ‘Challengers,’ Watch This Tennis Rom-Com Grab your tennis rackets and your popcorn for this one!

These feelings for each other lead to some of the steamiest moments in a movie this year, electric and sexually charged until everyone seems like might spontaneously combust. After watching Tashi play for the first time, Art and Patrick invite her back to their shared hotel room, where we begin to see how affecting Tashi is in this relationship. Guadagnino builds the tension in these scenes, as we’re just as unsure as any of these three where this is actually going to head. We learn about this trio naturally, as they discuss their pasts while heavily flirting, while we sit on the edge of our seats wondering where this key moment in their lives is going to end up. Challengers’ wears its overwhelming sexuality on its sleeve, as another scene has Patrick and Art sitting extremely close to each other, aggressively eating churros in each other’s vicinity—and eating each other’s churros as well. The film is so overt in its double entendres that it becomes part of the intentional humor, an unusual air that hangs over every scene.

‘Challengers’ Is an Excellent Mystery to Be Explored, Thanks to Luca Guadagnino and Justin Kuritzkes
Image via MGM

Challengers, even with its twisty entanglements, could’ve been a much more straightforward affair, yet it isn’t due to the incredible filmmaking on display. Kuritzkes’ script liberally flies back and forth through time, exploring the present by expanding the future consistently. Yet Kuritzkes’ narrative never manages to get overwhelmed by this constant shifting. As we see an action within the Phil’s Tire Town Challenger that seems unusual, Kuritzkes goes back to explore the origins of that strange quirk, almost as if he’s a detective hunting for the clues to what led to this current situation. But again, this is a strength because of how seamlessly it all works, making the past and the present tie into one natural story being told.

But naturally, this wouldn’t work without Guadagnino’s careful hand and editor Marco Costa’s incredible job at making sure this convoluted story doesn’t become too much to handle. Guadagnino knows how to build tension in every scene, whether it’s an unbearable lust that our characters can’t seem to shake, or the intensity of a tennis match where seemingly anything can happen. This is also aided by the thumping, escalating score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross that builds up during the tennis scenes, while Guadagnino puts us right alongside the players, often bouncing us along like we’re the tennis ball going across the court.

This ends up feeling like a culmination of Guadagnino’s talents, all wrapped up into a film that seems like his most commercial project yet on paper. We have the absurd build in passion that we saw in something like Call Me by Your Name, mixed with the unpredictability of a film like Bones and All, and the build to a remarkable conclusion that ended Suspiria with a bang. But it’s also tied into the complicated character-focused dramas that Guadagnino began his features career with. It’s simply gratifying to watch Guadagnino combine all of his skills into this one immensely entertaining project.

Challengers is a wild love triangle story, punctuated by three excellent performances and tremendous talent behind the camera. This is a film that could’ve easily been more conventional and lascivious in its approach, yet Guadagnino’s handling of Kuritzkes’ screenplay makes this into something far greater. Simply put, Challengers is quite a serve.

Challengers REVIEWLuca Guadagnino’s Challengers is a captivating love triangle, led by three remarkable performances, and a delightful script that almost treats this story like a mystery.ProsChallengers feels like a culmination of Luca Guadagnino’s talents in an immensely charming, intense, and fun film.Justin Kuritzkes’ script blends the past and the present to expand and unravel these complicated relationships.Zendaya, Mike Faist, and Josh O?Connor are a delight, with Zendaya maybe giving her best performance yet.

Challengers comes to theaters in the U.S. on April 26. Click below for showtimes.

Get Tickets

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
The Harsh Realities of Peak Millennial Activism

Imagine this: After months of finally coming to the conclusion that you want a divorce, you lay it out for your spouse, and then the next morning, Russia invades Ukraine. Okay, sure, perhaps if you don't live in Eastern Europe,…

Feb 13, 2026

In Case You Forgot, Climate Change Sucks

In the northern corner of the Canadian province of Manitoba lies the small town of Churchill, colloquially known as the "Polar Bear Capital of the World." Here, polar bears have become a common part of everyday life. Tourists come to…

Feb 13, 2026

Anaconda Review | Flickreel

To some, the original Anaconda is a 90s cult classic. To others, it’s a so bad, it’s good guilty pleasure. To me, it’s just a bad movie. Not awful, but as weird as it sounds, Anaconda wasn’t quite over-the-top enough…

Feb 11, 2026

A Cinematic Marvel Sans Thrill

Starring the ultimate action hero of Bollywood, Sunny Deol, as Lieutenant Colonel Fateh Singh Kaler Jai Hind! A highly anticipated Hindi war epic blasted the big screens on January 23, 2026, marking the weekend of India’s Republic Day. It is…

Feb 11, 2026