The man behind tennis superstars Venus and Serena — ‘King Richard.’ Left to right, Aunjanue Ellis, Mikayla Bartholomew, Will Smith, Saniyya Sidney, Demi Singleton, and Daniele Lawson co-star in ‘King Richard.’
BY DWIGHT BROWN, NNPA News Wire Film Critic
King Richard has won the coveted Miami International Film Festival GEMS 2021 Audience Award, and it’s no wonder. It’s a crowd-pleaser!
The spirit of the prescient planner, dreamer, and barker Richard Williams, the work ethic and faith of his wife Oracene “Brandy” Price, coupled with the talent of Venus and Serena, molded the Williams sisters into tennis icons. It’s a clear, self-empowering force that’s echoed in this inspiring, Oscar-worthy bio/film.
Once upon a time, in the low-income neighborhood of Compton in Los Angeles, a doting father, and smart mother have a keen vision for two of their offspring: “Venus and Serena gonna shake up this world.” A non-traditional path leads them in, out, and around the normal white bread, upper-class tennis system, ultimately helping them achieve monumental goals. It’s the American dream personified, and King Richard provides a visual roadmap others can follow.
One of the film’s producers’ smartest decisions was hiring tennis-lover/screenwriter Zach Baylin (Creed III) to write and nurture a script that focuses on a segment of time and not the entire Williams story. After some background plotting, this glimpse begins when Richard approaches coaches to get Venus on the junior circuit.
Within this narrowly focused window, the screenplay thoroughly develops the characters as they face familial challenges, neighborhood bullies, and a skeptical tennis world. The smaller, intimate canvas—fewer people and settings—solidifies the characters’ identities, thoughts, and feelings, which are sometimes manifested in poignant, often humorous dialogue: As Richard drives past a cemetery, he says to his kids: “Say hi to the people that are gone.”
The bane of many tennis movies is that producers frequently hire actors who can’t swing a racquet like a pro. The genius of hiring Saniyya Sidney (Fences) to play Venus and Demi Singleton (Godfather of Harlem) to portray Serena is that either they’ve played before, or someone showed them how to produce groundstrokes exactly the way the real sisters do. Open stance, lots of power.
Many will cite the outstanding performances of Will Smith as Richard and the very talented Aunjanue Ellis (If Beal Street Could Talk) as Oracene as the foundation for this thoughtfully written, acted, and directed film. Tennis players, however, will point to the realistic serves, strokes and volleys, and the exposure of some of the professional game’s most irritating quirks. E.g., taking strategic but unnecessary bathroom breaks during a match to disrupt your rival’s focus. It’s frowned upon but still legal.
Smith may gain an Oscar nom for his all-in performance in a very showy role about a goal-achieving yet imperfect man. He’s got the mannerisms and speech pattern just about right, but if you peek behind Richard’s curtain, there’s Will Smith pretending to be Williams. If Delroy Lindo had been cast, his skills, natural physicality, and self-assuredness would have made his performance invisible.
Ellis is quite endearing as the mom who demands r-e-s-p-e-c-t. Sidney, Singleton, and all the other young women who play the sisters at different stages melt into the scenery—it’s like watching kids in real-time. Tony Goldwyn’s interpretation of the sisters’ first coach, Paul Cohen, is fine. Jon Bernthal (The Punisher), as their kinetic coach Rick Macci, is far more impressive in a pivotal role: Richard reminds the coach who is king: “You’re like a member of our family. But you work for us!”
Kris Bowers’ (Bridgerton) musical score tweaks emotions in all the right places. Thanks to production designers William Arnold and Wynn Thomas, the Williams’ home looks lived-in. Costume designer Sharen Davis (Dreamgirls) gives the family clothes that look like they’re off the rack at TJ Maxx. Clean but not too flashy. All the tech efforts are artfully captured by cinematographer Robert Elswit (There Will Be Blood) and given a steady rhythm by editor Pamela Martin (Battle of the Sexes), making this two-hour, 18-minute chapter of a bigger life story move quickly.
With the classic against-the-odds script, Director Reinaldo Marcus Green (Monsters and Men, Joe Bell) heaps so many challenges on the family you’ve got to root for them. Green milks the drama out of the gangs that threaten Richard, the husband/wife strife, and the tennis world ambivalent about opening its doors to interlopers. His direction is as moving as the performances and storyline.
If there is one weakness in the production, it’s the language. The Harder They Fall, a recent rough ’em up gang-style Black cowboy movie, didn’t use the “N” word. So, why does this “family movie” drop the “N” bomb? The real sisters don’t use that word. Why do children—especially Black kids—have to listen to this kind of language? It’s a flaw that could have been fixed in post-production.
It’s easy to enjoy this classic, disarming American saga. Easier to watch the father, mother, and daughters shake up the stodgy world of tennis. Expect audiences—in theaters or their living rooms—to applaud everyone’s efforts. Richard knew his family’s day would come: “I’m in the champion building business.” Yep.
In theaters and on HBOMAX Nov. 19.
Visit NNPA News Wire Film Critic Dwight Brown at DwightBrownInk.com and BlackPressUSA.com.
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