Venus, Serena, and their father: 鈥楰ing Richard鈥 biopic is an ace
A top-notch performance by Will Smith and an inspirational story combine for sheer pleasure in the biopic 鈥淜ing Richard,鈥 says the Monitor鈥檚 film critic.
A top-notch performance by Will Smith and an inspirational story combine for sheer pleasure in the biopic 鈥淜ing Richard,鈥 says the Monitor鈥檚 film critic.
鈥淜ing Richard,鈥 starring Will Smith in his best performance yet, is an enormously entertaining movie about Richard Williams, the high-powered patriarch of tennis superstars Venus (Saniyya Sidney) and Serena (Demi Singleton). Perhaps 鈥渉igh-powered鈥 doesn鈥檛 quite capture him. Obsessively controlling? Imperially stubborn? However he comes across in the movie 鈥 and he鈥檚 all of these things and more 鈥 you can鈥檛 argue with the results: He meticulously groomed his daughters practically from birth to become two of the greatest players in history. 鈥淚鈥檓 in the champion-raising business,鈥 he declares early on.
No argument there.
The film opens with Richard鈥檚 voice-over: 鈥淲hen I grew up, tennis was not a game people played. We were too busy running from the Klan.鈥 He occasionally alludes to his harrowing Louisiana boyhood, but his overriding focus is the respect he demands for his family, including three other daughters and his exasperated, waywardly supportive wife, Brandi (Aunjanue Ellis, whose richly layered performance fully matches Smith鈥檚).聽
Because the Williams sisters, winningly played in the film, are such fixtures in the superstar firmament, it鈥檚 easy to forget how unlikely their origin story is. Growing up in the gang-ridden Los Angeles suburb of Compton, they played, rain or shine, not on well-tended country club courts but in ramshackle local parks.聽
Richard, who works as an after-hours security guard, is merciless in his mentorship 鈥 his motto is 鈥淚f you fail to plan, you plan to fail鈥 鈥 and yet the girls clearly adore him. It鈥檚 because he cares. There鈥檚 a marvelous moment near the beginning when Richard cautiously confronts a gang member who has been coming on to the eldest sister Tunde聽(Mikayla Lashae Bartholomew)聽on the tennis court, and as a van load of his daughters looks on, is summarily beaten. What makes the scene so powerful is the sad, resigned look on their faces. They鈥檝e seen this before. Their brief consolations on the drive home are the surest sign of their love.
As Richard makes the rounds looking for a top coach for the preteen Venus and Serena, he brushes off the vaguely condescending rejections. When he finally lands a biggie 鈥 Paul Cohen (a terrific Tony Goldwyn), who coaches Pete Sampras and John McEnroe 鈥 he insists on second-guessing him. Cohen agrees to coach just Venus, whose ascent from 1991 to 1994 is the film鈥檚 primary focus, because he won鈥檛 train both daughters for free. When Cohen is later dumped for Rick Macci (Jon Bernthal, also terrific), Richard bullies him, too.聽
Although the film, directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green and written by Zach Baylin, doesn鈥檛 make a big point of it, Richard鈥檚 mania for success is clearly racially motivated. He chastises the agents and managers who want to highlight Venus鈥 roots, and yet it鈥檚 obvious he enjoys the way she, in effect, is sticking it to the white establishment.聽
As enjoyable as the film is, it does nevertheless skirt some of the more questionable aspects of Richard鈥檚 manipulations and airbrushes a few of this family man鈥檚 more unsavory aspects, such as his serial infidelities. Was he using his daughters as glorified props in his campaign to overthrow his past and seize respect? He鈥檚 an inveterate braggart who lectures his daughters to stay humble. Did they never bridle at his strictness?聽
Perhaps because Venus and Serena are executive producers, these issues and contradictions are never really confronted in the film. We are also left with the largely unchallenged notion, per Richard, that hard work can make anything happen. I imagine that mantra is cold comfort to all those people of color in poor neighborhoods who lack the Williams sisters鈥 gifts.聽
But perhaps it鈥檚 too much to ask of a Hollywood biopic that it be both crowd-pleasing and scrupulously probing. The fact remains that, however it came to pass, the Williams sisters鈥 saga is so improbably inspirational that watching their ascent, coupled with Smith鈥檚 crackerjack performance, had me grinning the entire time. It鈥檚 the most sheerly pleasurable movie I鈥檝e seen so far this year.
Peter Rainer is the Monitor鈥檚 film critic. 鈥淜ing Richard鈥 is rated PG-13 for some violence, strong language, a sexual reference, and brief drug references.聽The film is available in theaters and on HBO Max on Nov. 19.聽
Editor's note: This review has been updated to correct which sister is being harassed on the tennis court early in the movie. It is Tunde.