Monday 11 December 2017

A famous Game, well Set, bizarrely Matched. Battle of the Sexes.



Battle of the Sexes tells the story of the 1973 tennis math between Billy Jean King, one of the top women players in the world in the 1970’s and 80’s, and Bobby Riggs, one of the best male players in the 1940’s.    Billy  won Wimbledon 6 times between 1966 and ’75, and Bobby had won the Wimbledon Triple, Singles, Doubles and Mixed Doubles in 1939, and was many times the US Champion.     

So this is a movie about an important tennis game, in terms of the equal rights women and of the claims of Feminism, well set in its period,  and a bizarre match between two of the greatest tennis players of their different periods.     But more than that.  This is a film about human beings, our passions, our failings and our fidelity.  

The game came about because Billy Jean had campaigned against the lower pay of women players and, with the active support of her husband Larry,  set up the Women’s Tennis Association, in opposition to the Lawn Tennis Association.     Bobby was a self confessed hustler and self-promoter.   With Feminism in the game being  championed by Billy Jean and Larry King, Bobby saw an opportunity to prove male superiority – and to make money.   Although he was 55, he played and beat the Australian Margaret Court, the current world number 1,  in straight sets.  

Billy Jean, 29 at the time, and who Bobby had previously challenged for a match, decided to take him on.  Bobby ramped up the public interest with a series of stunts, claiming to be a proud Male Chauvinist Pig, and they played in the Houston Astrodome in front of 30,000 spectators and a Word wide TV audience  estimated at 90 million.   The prize for the winner was $100,000.  That was not what mattered to Billy Jean, who understood the positive and negative consequences of the result.   

Early on in the film we see Billy Jean, married to Larry King,  falling in love with Marilyn Bartlett, her hairdresser.    Billy Jean is played by Emma Stone,  with absolute conviction,  and Marilyn by the wonderful Andrea Riseborough (Stone and Riseborough were both in Birdman).   So apart from a game between a man and a woman there are a number of other battles here, Feminism vs Chauvinism and sexual freedom vs prejudice. 

Although one might be tempted to see Billy Jean as the heroine and Bobby Riggs as a pantomime villain  (which he painted himself as, show man that he was), but in fact the film plays both sides of the net fairly in a number of ways.   We see Riggs as he makes the play, sure he will beat Billy as easily as he beat Margaret Court - who had taken over from Billy as women's number one - and then we see fear in his eyes as he faces the utterly focussed Billy on the court.  Steve Carrell plays the outrageous, gambling addicted Riggs well (and looks just like him), and wins our sympathy despite his faults.   

Bill Pullman plays Jack Kramer, the tennis star who helped found the LTA and became a very successful TV commentator.   Kramer is shown as being in opposition to Billy Jean’s claims for equal pay and the WTA.  Pullman is a very consistent actor – and dedicated community worker - and his son Lewis plays Riggs’ adult son.    The rest of the cast includes the multi-talented Sarah Silverman as Gladys Heldman, the WTA organizer,  Alan Cumming as Cuthbert ‘Ted’ Tinling ,  the girls couturier and confidant to Billy Jean,  Austin Stowell (Francis Gary Powers in Bridge of Spies) as Larry, Elizabeth Shue (is it really 22 years since Leaving Los Vagas?!) as Bobby’s Prescilla, and the Australian TV actress Jessica MacNamee as Margaret Court.

The bright colour and period music recreate the American 1970's wonderfully, but we also see the misogynist, homophobic – and it seems anti-Semitic -  atmosphere that pervaded even  California.    

Jonathan Dayton has previously directed many cutting edge music videos and documentaries in his time, particularly with The Red Hot Chilli Peppers, this film has the energy and pace of a music video, but Dayton does not ignore the human dimensions,  as we saw in his  Little Miss Sunshine, which also starred Steve Carrell.   The tight script is by Simon Beaufoy (The Full Monty, Slumdog Millionaire, Hunger Games; Catching Fire etc. ).    The music was composed by  Nicolas Brittell (Moonlight)  and the photographer was Linus Sandgren (La-la Land and American Hustle).   The Production Designer was  Judith Becker, who did such good period work in Brokeback Mountain, American Hustle and Carol, and worked with Dayton on Ruby Sparks.

For those who are not tennis fans there is just enough tennis to tell the story,  but not to bore them, and for those who are fans it looks very authentic - remembering how wooden rackets made the game so much slower then.    

But this movie is about love as much as it is about tennis.    We see Billy Jean falling in love with Marilyn Barnett.  We see Billy Jean’s husband Larry coming to terms with her developing lesbian sexuality – and her primary passion for tennis - in good grace.  No, it is more than good.  There is something quietly heroic about his love and acceptance of her, exactly as she is.   Larry and Billy Jean eventually divorced in 1989, freeing Billy to live with her women’s tennis and life partner Llan Koss, but they remained close.   Priscilla Riggs also remained married to Bobby, despite his gambling addiction.    Bobby was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1989, and died in 1995.  Billy Jean had become his friend, phoning and visiting him until the end.   She said her last words to him were ‘I love you.’


I recommend it heartily.