The final twenty minutes of Challengers is a masterclass in cinema. The ball goes back and forth over the net, but the score drops into a thumping, distorted club beat. As the camera switches between slow motion and real time, you realize you aren't watching a match anymore. You’re watching three people have a religious experience. Sweat, rain, blood, and ego collide in a cacophony that ends with a scream so primal it gave me chills. Challengers is messy. The timeline jumps around so much you might get whiplash. The characters are unlikable in the most realistic way possible. But that’s the point.
Luca Guadagnino’s electric, sweaty, synth-soaked thriller isn’t really about tennis. Tennis is just the battlefield. The real sport on display is
🎾🎾🎾🎾 (4 out of 5 Aces) Best paired with: An energy drink, a toxic situationship, and a willingness to watch Zendaya stare daggers for two hours. Challengers
Whether you love tennis or hate it, see this movie. Just be prepared to feel like you need a shower and a cigarette afterward.
The movie asks a brutal question: What happens when you stop being the challenger? The final twenty minutes of Challengers is a
Art is the champion. He has the money, the fame, the endorsement deals. But he’s bored. He’s soft. Patrick is the challenger—hungry, broke, and dangerous. The entire film builds to a single, rainy match at a low-tier New York challenger event. On paper, the champ shouldn't be there. But the champ needs to feel something again. I cannot write about this movie without mentioning Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’s score. It is not a sports soundtrack. It is a techno rave mixed with a panic attack.
If you walked into Challengers expecting a standard sports drama about a comeback kid, you probably left the theater feeling like you’d just been hit in the face with a racket. And honestly? That’s a good thing. You’re watching three people have a religious experience
This isn't Rocky . You won't find a wholesome underdog story here. You will find a film about how love and hate are the same emotion, and how sometimes the only way two people know how to communicate is by hitting a felt ball as hard as they can at each other’s faces.