Review: In ‘Challengers,’ everyone wants to come out on top

Oakland native Zendaya crushes it down the line, and from the very opening moments, in “Challengers,” Luca Guadagnino’s magnificently sexy and sweaty beyond all realistic belief “Challengers.”

The refreshingly adult drama peers in on the games that limber, calculating athletes play both on and off tennis courts — a metaphor, naturally, that applies to the power dynamics adventurous lovers often negotiate.

Zendaya is a thunderbolt that strikes time and again in “Challengers” and she gives this passionate drama all the reverberating rumble it requires.

Working off an screenplay from stage dramatist and novelist Justin Kuritzkes, she proves she’s perfect to play Tashi, one of the most indelible, assured female characters we’ve encountered onscreen in some time. She’s fierce and strong in body, mind and confidence. She’s also driven, and knows exactly what she wants — to be at the top of her game at all times, regardless of which game she’s dealing with.

“Challengers” fluidly jumps back and forth in time as it reveals how the past influences the present. We are shown how Tashi became a tennis sensation at an early age; at 18 she holds the world and numerous fawning guys in the palm of her hand.

That includes two bros and up-and-coming tennis players —  the play-it-loose Patrick (indie heartthrob Josh O’Connor) and the more reigned-in Art (“West Side Story’s” Mike Faist). After watching her obliterate her competition on the court and hearing her release a primordial scream of victory that sends shivers down the spine, the hormonal guys find themselves stupidly gobsmacked and transfixed by her.

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Shortly thereafter, the threesome meet up at a motel — the selling point of the film’s trailer — for one hot make-out session reveals the robust, if subconscious, attraction all three have for each other. It’s a smoldering cinematic exchange and director Guadagnino — who so expertly navigated the insistent desire in “Call Me By Your Name,” with Timothee Chalamet and Armie Hammer — toys with how these two handsome straight guys are drawn to each other in ways they might not even realize. The ever-aware Tashi, notices right off.

The dynamics of the threesome radically change once Tashi and Patrick start a fiery relationship while a jealous Art — who loves to be the “good guy” — frets on the sidelines. A brutal injury Tashi sustains while playing for Stanford (the film was not shot there) shuts down her playing days, leading her to later become coach to Art, who eventually starts to loosen his passionate grip on the sport.

As you can tell, there’s a lot of volleying back and forth — in various ways — in “Challengers,” which sets it apart from traditional “sports-related” films. Then comes the nail-biting showdown between two erstwhile friends and now competitors – Patrick and Art. Both actors are game for it: O’Connor embodies the soul of a slacker here and is ever so sexy while Faist brings just the right amount of empathy and resignation to his part as a good person that lacks a certain spark.

The adrenaline-pumping “challengers” match takes place some 13 years after the threesome have met. It is here when Guadagnino calls out all the stops — and opens the faucets on geysers of sweat torrenting down from the brows of these two adversaries and former besties. If that doesn’t amp you up, the throbbing, caffeinated soundtrack from Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross will. It hits you hard like a triple shot of espresso that’s been washed down with a Red Bull. And if that doesn’t do it, perhaps the tennis ball POV will do the trick.

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“Challengers” gets unruly, passionate, tempestuous and downright impossible as its three lovers get tangled up in their desire and ambitions. That’s why it makes such grand-slam entertainment, especially in its delicious excessiveness.

Contact Randy Myers at soitsrandy@gmail.com.

‘CHALLENGERS’

3½ stars out of 4

Rating: R (language, some sexual content, nudity)

Starring: Zendaya, Josh O’Connor, Mike Faist

Director: Luca Guadagnino

Running time: 2 hours, 11 minutes

When & where: Opens April 26 at theaters nationwide

 

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