Battle of the Sexes is an absorbing re-creation of
events only partly known even to sports fans who remember just the public face
of the circus that it chronicles. In brief, its notionally about Bobby Riggs,
the down on his luck gambling addict and formerly triple tennis Grand Slam
winner, who hit on the idea of challenging the best women tennis players in the
world. Riggs is perfectly rendered by the inimitable Steve Carell. Really, it’s about
the pain and difficulty of coming out lesbian and the struggle of women for
equality. The bastion of reaction and the stand in for the (still) male world
of sports administration is tennis promoter Jack Kramer, oleaginously
impersonated by the great Bill Pullman
In saying
that it re-creates those events, you of course have no idea whether some
license has been taken in placing the personal crisis of Billie-Jean King
around the match between her and Riggs and in perfect alignment with King’s first
exploration of her lesbian preferences. It sure makes for a dramatic movie
though.
It was
obvious that much of the crowd at the Randwick Ritz had no idea who won the
match. There were gasps and cheers as points were played, won and lost in the
final match. Tension abounded and the crowd responded to the rather fine
editing which accelerated King’s assumption of dominance over the tiring and
under-trained Riggs as the match neared its end. We remembered with some glee
how Riggs put his faith in the ingestion of massive amounts of vitamins and
dietary supplements in preference to practise.
The makers
have nailed all this.
Emma Stone as Billie-Jean King, Jessica McNamee as Margaret Court, Battle of the Sexes |
They have
also nailed the representation of Margaret Court, the Australian multiple Grand
Slam winner, almost unbeatable for some years before both King and Evonne
Goolagong came along to dislodge her. In the film Court joins the nascent women’s
circuit already a mother and bringing along her husband Barry as child-minder.
Barry was one of the sons of Charlie Court, the Premier of Western Australia
who presided over the first great WA mining boom. Another son Richard also
became Premier of the state. Margaret Court became part of the WA establishment but was always a sour-faced person,
utterly humourless. She took a very dim view of anything much beyond literal
meanings of the Bible. She has ended up as some sort of pastor in some ratbag
fundamentalist sect no doubt conveying her eternal sourpussedness to her
captive Sunday crowd. One of the arenas at the Melbourne Tennis Centre is named after her.
On Court’s
arrival to join the newly formed Virginia Slims women’s circuit the film-makers make
clear that Margaret is one out, a mother who disapproves of all that women’s sports
lesbianism that she sees rampant among the top players. She has kept her views
strong throughout her life and is now among the leading figures in the current “No”
campaign urging a vote against same-sex marriage. She has taken a particular
dislike to Alan Joyce the gay CEO of Qantas who has both urged a “Yes” vote and
put a million bucks of his own money into the campaign. Margaret Court suggested a boycott of Qantas.
If it had been a union thug suggesting a boycott of some business for political
reasons the ACCC would have been up their arse very quickly but the right gets
away with these things.
Just a
couple more things to note. Someone in the White House, perhaps even the Grand
Boojum himself, has seen this movie. One of the songs featured on the
soundtrack as Billie-Jean and Marilyn drive towards LA is Elton John’s “Rocket
Man”. It’s appearance at this moment suggests someone on Pennsylvania Avenue
suggested hey that’s what we should call that North Korean guy with the bad
haircut. Yes, put it in somewhere in that speech the Chief is giving at the UN.
Ho ho, what a wheeze. Political staffers rest easy for a day or so when they come up with one
of those.
And… while
Tony Abbott is worrying about a song at the NRL Grand Final he should also be
worried about this movie and its ability to move people. Probably should be
more worried because the lesson of this movie is being absorbed by hundreds of thousands of people as we live and breathe. At its end, after Billie-Jean and her long suffering husband have
squared things away and after Ted Tinling has given a rousing little speech about
being yourself, applause broke out. You could feel a palpable positive mood.
Maybe when the “Yes” case is run and won, someone might just reflect on the
modest influence of this little movie.
And more…by
the way, Emma Stone’s impersonation of Billie-Jean King is quite something….
Emma Stone, Battle of the Sexes |
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