NEW YORK โ How sexy can a qualifying tennis tournament in New Rochelle, New York, be? When the on-court drama involves Zendaya, Josh OโConnor and Mike Faist, the answer turns out to be quite a bit more than your average USTA singles match in Luca Guadagninoโs โChallengers.โ
The film, directed by Guadagnino from a script by playwright Justin Kuritzkes, may have the appearance of a sports movie. Much of the action happens in between baselines. There are break points and short shorts. But in Guadagninoโs film, whatโs being volleyed isnโt just a fuzzy little yellow ball.
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โThe ball is the ephemeral, invisible force of desire,โ says Guadagnino, the director of โCall Me By Your Nameโ and โBones and All.โ โI wanted to show desire going back and forth.โ
The result, by a score of about six-love, is the love triangle of the year. โChallengers,โ which Amazon MGM Studios releases in theaters Friday, takes the melodrama of the threesome and gives it a breathless, bi-curious spin. Thatโs especially due to the multilateral chemistry between Zendaya, OโConnor and Faist โ all actors in their late 20s or early 30s, all very capable of smoldering when called upon.
Itโs a big-screen statement especially for Zendaya, whoโs also a producer on the film. She plays Tashi, the wife and coach of tennis superstar Art (Faist, the โWest Side Storyโ breakout). Tashi was only relegated to the sidelines because of a career-ending knee injury โ though it did little to sap her ambition. When Art, whose passion for tennis is fading, is matched in New Rochelle against an old friend, Patrick (OโConnor, star of Alice Rohrwacherโs recent โLa Chimeraโ ), their complicated past is, deliciously, resurrected.
Zendaya gravitated to the project not because it seemed a natural fit for her, but because it wasnโt.
โBecause it sounded like a challenge. Because it is so different from me,โ Zendaya said in an interview alongside her co-stars. โSometimes when youโre a little afraid to tackle something like that you, youโre like, โOo, maybe I should do it.โ I donโt want to walk into something and be like, โI got this. This is going to be easy.โโ
โChallengersโ was originally set to open last fallโs Venice Film Festival before it was postponed due to the actors strike. But the delay has only given more time for the buzz around the film to grow. That has a lot to do with the attention on everything Zendaya does, but it also has to do with how the film puts three exciting young actors in the center of the frame, and doesnโt let go.
โWhatโs special is that the three of us got to lead the movie. That is cool,โ says OโConnor. โAn opportunity to do something like that is so rare.โ
โSometimes Iโve been a part of big ensembles,โ adds Zendaya, who co-starred in the recent โDune: Part Two.โ โBut itโs just the three of us. We are the cast. While we obviously have other amazing actors that contribute, this is the core thing here. Tennis training and the rehearsal period, it was just us. So thank god that we like each other.โ
Guadagnino, known for his organic way of working, compares the weeks he and the three stars spent together preparing in Boston to โkids on the beach creating castles of sand.โ Though Faist has some ability, the rest were hopeless at tennis. Guadagnino hadnโt picked up a racquet in his life before stepping onto the set in โChallengers.โ Famed tennis coach Brad Gilbert was brought in to help.
But โChallengersโ isnโt really about tennis, thatโs just the arena where attraction and emotion in the film ultimately spills out. When itโs pointed out to Guadagnino that the tennis scenes are essentially his movieโs sex scenes, he responds, โThank you.โ
Faist, OโConnor and Zendaya all connected in different ways not just to how desire ebbs and flows but to how the characters are each juggling their fluctuating passions with their careers.
โIt is this constant navigation in what we do. Once a project is over then youโre kind of in limbo. Youโre always trying to find that thing that sparks something inside of you,โ Faist says. โIt was something I really resonated with, that idea of falling in and out of love with your craft.โ
For Zendaya, the idea of having your craft ripped away, as it for Tashi, fueled arguably her finest film performance yet. โChallengersโ is also the first time sheโs leading a theatrical release.
โIโm grateful that I picked a career that I can keep doing for as long as I want to. I can be 80 years old and still be making movies if I get lucky enough to be able to or if thatโs something I still want to be do then,โ Zendaya says. โI canโt imagine that idea of that life or thing that makes you happy or gives you power being ripped away from you. I deeply empathize with that.โ
Producer Amy Pascal first brought โChallengersโ to Zendaya, a fittingly full-circle moment considering that Pascal cast Zendaya in her big-screen breakthrough, 2017โs โSpider-Man: Homecoming.โ โChallengers,โ though, signals a shift into more mature screen roles for the 27-year-old who from a young age as a Disney TV star had the responsibly of fame and providing for her family on her shoulders.
โSomething I deal with personally is the idea of what I should want, or what people want for me,โ Zendaya says. โI empathize with that in Tashi but also in Art because heโs playing for two people. Heโs not just selfishly playing for his own joy anymore, heโs playing for someone else. Sometimes our work can feel like that, too. Weโre playing for the benefit of other people, what people want for us, rather than what really would just make you happy.โ
For Zendaya, Faist and OโConnor, โChallengersโ allowed them to, when not busy steaming up the screen, wrestle with their own ambitions. OโConnor, who portrayed Prince Charles on โThe Crown,โ shot โLa Chimeraโ โ playing a character he more closely identified with โ in between a very different role in โChallengers.โ
โHe is front-footed, heโs overly confident โ all these qualities that Iโve always admired and always wanted that Iโve never quite been able to have. Just to play it and be in his shoes for a few months was bliss,โ says OโConnor. โThatโs what Iโll hold on to with Patrick. I really like Patrick. I know heโs problematic but I really like him. I find him hilarious and charming and he knows himself. And those are all qualities that I donโt necessarily have but I admire in him.โ
The connections and challenges each star brought to โChallengersโ added up to a remarkably intimate drama and a potentially career-shifting experience. Even Guadagnino, who generally prefers editing to shooting, found his time on hard court with Zendaya, O'Connor and Faist to be enthralling.
โIt was joyous and it was a nice and it was energetic," says Guadagnino. "It was a good company.โ
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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP