excellent, excellent, excellent
- another biopic for the awards season, but unlike house of gucci, this one really hit me.
- Man, the sporting environment is undoubtedly one of the hardest sectors to live with, especially being as young as Venus and Serena... people, during the film, may find Will Smith's character boring, grumpy, bossy and rude....but honestly, I felt a lot of empathy not for his actions but for the reason he did them. His biggest goal is to protect his daughters from what could have become the decline of their childhood... the pressure brought on by sport, the total loss of childhood putting success above all else, the loss of the humility that he and his wife feel. devoted so much to teaching! Richard just wants his daughters to have fun without the toxicity that most parents act with their children (situation mentioned throughout the film)... so as a person who gave up sport because of that same pressure, I could understand the incessant Richard's quest for that big goal: just letting his daughters live their childhood and play tennis in a fun way.
- however, although the film is restricted only to richard's relationship with these two daughters, at a certain point in the film the fact that Richard has other children is mentioned: this is not developed, it is not explored in any way, and that It pisses me off because why mention it if it won't show anymore?? it gave me the impression that the script wanted to hide this ''troubled'' part of richard's life, all this apart from the fact that the other three daughters that are presented to us are completely relegated to the background.... that's how it is in real life??? the movie hides a lot, period
WILL SIMITH IS GREAT: His scenes with Anjuanue Ellis are sensational and yield stunning dialogue, the actresses who play the daughters are also great
- doubly recommended!!!!!!!!
Movies based on true stories often struggle to impress me. I think this is mainly due to two interconnected issues: (1) minor knowledge of the true story can make the movie feel predictable or even boring; and (2) those elements of the movie that do manage to surprise often raise alarm bells as I instinctively assume that they are the result of creative liberties or embellishment at the very least (for example, the ridiculously coincidental sequence in which Will Smith intends to shoot his daughter's harasser right as the harasser is the victim of a drive by shooting feels like pure Hollywood fiction). These issues are perhaps even more problematic when the true story is sport based, as sports movies have their own baggage in the form of numerous well worn tropes and clichés.
All of that said, the movie is far from bad. Will Smith plays the complicated father role well. The child actresses, which can often make or break a movie like this, all do a good job. I thought both coach relationships were interesting and well executed. Jon Bernthal in particular seemed to have a lot of fun in his role. There were also plenty of nice tennis history callouts/cameos that I was able to appreciate even as only a passive tennis fan. All in all, probably worth the watch for Will Smith fans, tennis fans, and certainly Venus/Serena fans.
I appreciate this film’s effort to tell such a famous story from an unexpected perspective. As a casual tennis fan and huge Williams sisters admirer, I knew little about the role Richard Williams played in their success.
By choosing to centre Richard, as much as it somewhat takes away from Venus and Serena’s much deserved and hard-earned protagonism, it does offer something different from your expected biopic. This raised really interesting questions about fatherhood and young stardom, spending a relatively big portion of the film around the debate of whether Venus should play junior tournaments - as much as Richard planned his children’s whole life for them and worked them so hard a neighbour even had to call the cops on him, here he chooses an unexpected stance by prioritising their childhood and education above entering big level competitions so early on. Therefore, I feel like this is a pretty balanced portrayal of Richard, giving credit where credit is due when it comes to his unwavering belief in his children, his unconditional love for them and vision, but also using other characters like Oracene or the coaches to call him out on his more eccentric behaviours and whenever his ego starts to get the best of him. The final speech with Venus in the lockerroom leads you by the hand to reach the conclusion that he was essentially a good father, but the movie still leaves considerable space for you to make your own judgements and to spark debate on how to raise a prodigy child (or even more complicated- two!). By knowing how Venus and Serena turned out in the end, we also are more prone to siding with Richard, because however him and Oracene raised their children, it looks like it worked because the Williams sisters have had a remarkable journey, whilst remaining humble and giving back.
As much as the screenplay’s highs and lows follow the standard for a big Hollywood movie; as much as there’s not much nuance surrounding the issue of race (with some scenes being forced into the narrative for emphasis, but not quite fitting in); as much as there’s some loose threads that are common with biopics that have to deal with real (messy) lives and real (messy) people and try to force them into a pretty little organised Hollywood picture; this movie still has a lot working in its favour, namely the choice of subject matter, Will Smith’s performance and the excitement that always accompanies sports-related films.
A wonderful biography film that tells the story of sisters Serena Williams and Venus Williams, whose careers were planned before they were born and who have now risen to the status of legendary tennis players, and their father, who played the biggest role in achieving this status.
A story that should be an inspiration to everyone about perseverance, stubbornness, faith and being aware of the world you live in and writing your own destiny.
king richard is such a man that he knows what the black ghettos he lives in are. he is aware that if his daughters grow up here, they will either fall into drug addiction or run away with a snob as a teenager and spend their lives at home, giving birth to children. he makes a plan so that in the future his daughters will live a better life than he and his predecessors, and he keeps it alive stubbornly and persistently.
While watching it, it is hard not to envy this man's ambition and his firm adherence to his dreams. it even made me say "I wish I could go back 30 years and do what this man can do".
The duration is short for a biography, so we do not know the past and future of neither the girls nor their family. the focus is on the girls' path to becoming professionals. Even if it was 4 hours, I would watch it.
"King Richard" is a biopic that tells the story of the Williams sisters and their father, Richard Williams, who is portrayed by Will Smith. The film follows a familiar sports-themed biopic formula, but the focus is on the complex and conflicting character of Richard Williams. Will Smith's portrayal of him is noteworthy and earns him an Academy Award nomination, he captures the essence of this larger than life man, making the rest of the cast feels like window dressing. The film is an intimate peek behind the curtain of a famous family whose story isn't as well known as it should be. It's a creative way of telling the Williams sisters story and is worth watching.
"King Richard" es una película biográfica que cuenta la historia de las hermanas Williams y su padre, Richard Williams, quien es interpretado por Will Smith. La película sigue una fórmula biográfica familiar de temática deportiva, pero la atención se centra en el carácter complejo y conflictivo de Richard Williams. La interpretación de Will Smith de él es notable y le valió una nominación al premio de la Academia, captura la esencia de este hombre más grande que la vida, haciendo que el resto del elenco se sienta como un escaparate. La película es un vistazo íntimo detrás de la cortina de una familia famosa cuya historia no es tan conocida como debería ser. Es una forma creativa de contar la historia de las hermanas Williams y vale la pena verla.
Review by Andrew BloomVIP 9BlockedParentSpoilers2022-03-26T07:09:31Z
[7.4/10] If I authorized a film about my dad, you can bet it would be glowing. My father wasn’t a perfect man, but I love him. And so if someone wanted to present his life and his work to the public, and needed my sign-off to do it, I’d do my darndest to make sure the world saw the best of him. That is human and understandable.
So I don’t fault the Williams family, or the filmmakers who needed their permission and cooperation to make this film, for painting the generous portrait of Richard Williams in the film that bears his name and bestows a royal superlative upon it. Viewed through that lens, King Richard is a loving tribute to a father who, even in a hagiographic film, seems like he might have been a lot to handle growing up.
And yet, even on its own terms, it’s hard not to view this film as too charitable and sympathetic to its title character. Full disclosure,I know next to nothing about the real Richard Williams. I was vaguely aware of a reputation for pushing his daughters hard, but that’s about it. I have no idea whether the man is even more devoted, supportive, and true to his values than his fictional alternative, or whether he’s even more stubborn, myopic, and demanding than his cinematic equivalent.
What I do know is this: the movie wants to present its protagonist as someone who stuck to his guns and did what was best to ensure his girls’ success despite almost everyone else doubting him, particularly those in the establishment. He sets aside the supposed experts, supersedes their judgment with his own, and preaches humility, education, and patience to save his talented children from burning out. The ultimate conclusion of the movie is that Mr. Williams was right, if not in every choice, then in the thrust of his vaunted plan, to make his girls not only the biggest successes the sport has ever seen, but also well-adjusted, giving individuals who didn’t hit the personal and professional roadblocks of their colleagues.
Again, I have no idea if this is true in real life or not. But the problem is that, on the movie’s own terms, Richard seems like someone who constantly overestimates his own expertise and judgment, plays games with and even takes advantage of people who seem genuine in their desire to help Venus and Serena achieve their goals, and may even be a self-promoting huckster riding his daughters’ coattails as much as he is guiding them to glory.
In short, the film wants to present the story of someone who paved the way for his daughters’ success by sticking tight to his principles and his plan, even when the rest of the world was howling at him to stop. But it can also be read as the tale of a man who made every wrong move, was a jerk to the people trying to help including his own family-members, whose hidebound recalcitrance made him more of a hindrance than a help.
Seen through that lens, the film’s protagonist is a lucky stiff whose daughters’ success came not from his shrewd vision and willingness to remain steadfast, but through their immense talent which covered for his mistakes and made him fortunate enough to be along for the ride. King Richard is too willing to embrace the rosy view of its subject in lieu of a more exacting examination.
I say that not just because even when the film tries to paint a favorable picture of its main character, reading between the lines tells a different story. I say that because the few scenes where other characters take Richard to task are the best in the film.
In some ways, King Richard has another case of Wrong Protagonist Syndrome:tm:. The girls’ mother, Oracene, has a far more interesting story of the woman who held the Williams together when Richard was single-minded in his pursuits, stuck around the train Serena without the professional help Richard and Venus enjoyed, and supported her husband due to her religious beliefs despite disagreeing with plenty of his moves and resenting how he makes them without her.
It doesn’t hurt that Aunjanue Ellis gives the best performance in the film. She is real and full of conviction in a way that directly contrasts the other major performance in the film. When her version of Oracene dresses down Richard for plowing over her will and wants, or calls him on his crap and the way he’s ignored her contributions to their family and their success, there’s a vividness and willingness to deconstruct the devoted father figure who appears in so many sports movies that’s all but absent elsewhere.
Ellis cuts the opposite figure of Will Smith who, despite a performance lauded by the awards-giving bodies, is effectively a cartoon character in the title role. Every once in a while, Smith’s long-proven talents as an actor shines through. When he speaks to his daughter about his own difficult childhood experiences, or displays the relaxed charisma that Smith can pull off like no other, hints of a real person shine through. But two often, Smith is a bundle of tics and voices and grand Oscar reel speeches that speak to the way the Academy often looks for the “most acting” rather than the best acting.
Jon Bernthal is no less cartoony as Rick Macci, Venus’ coach, but his exaggeration is more tolerable and even amusing as a tertiary character than in the omnipresent lead performance. Berenthal’s cheesy but kind Macci is the positive counterpoint to Ben Stiller in Dodgeball. Despite the caricature, Bernthal nails the big scene where Macci likewise calls out Richard for not just overriding his will, or his wife’s will, but his daughter’s will. The combined forces of Oracene and Macci are seemingly enough to convince Richard to get out of the way, at least a little, and is the closest thing to an arc and a chastening the “king” receives in the film.
Therein lies much of the problem here. There’s very little in the way of stakes here. I may not know the ins and outs of Venus and Serena’s rise to prominence or their upbringing, but you’d have to be living under a rock not to know the successes they’ve become. So when a purportedly naive Richard goes knocking on every door in tennis and even stepping on toes in his struggle to get someone to believe his promises that his girls will become phenoms, there’s no tension because the audience knows (1.) he’s correct and (2.) they’ll prove him right.
The same goes for the tenuous choices toward the end of the film about whether or not to take a Nike deal on the table before Venus has taken a single swing or to instead bet on herself through showing her talents on the court. Even if that particular tournament wasn’t perfect, the fact that you can’t flip channels without seeing one of the Williams sisters as Wonder Woman or somebody in The Matrix suggests to even the least in-the-know viewer that it all worked out, if savvy watchers didn’t already figure that out from the inexorable gravity of sports movie cliches.
Having someone start from humble beginnings and lead those he cares about to a success the audience already knows only works if there’s sharp choices and compelling hurdles along the way. King Richard wants to present the title character as making smart decisions, but inadvertently (or surreptitiously) makes him seem like a stubborn jerk whose success owes more to his children’s incredible abilities rather than his calls, and the biggest hurdle seems to be him.
That’s the catch to all of this. I’ve spent a lot of time griping about the things wrong with this movie despite the fact that I largely liked it! It’s well-made, can boast a handful of incredible scenes, gets the audience invested in Venus’ journey, endears you to the Williams family as a whole, has its share of laughs, exposes racial divides and the grind of the sport, and convey the magnitude and scope of the girls’ journey from the crumbling playing surfaces of Compton to the flashbulbs of the center court at a pro tourney. There’s plenty that this movie does right.
But it’s also a good film that could have been a great one, which is the source of my frustration. Somewhere within this perfectly solid, eminently watchable film, lurks a more interesting, compelling, frank look at a complicated parent’s influence in the lives of the daughters who would become stars. If it could cast off the award season and sports movie tropes, and delve more frankly into the balance of flaws and nobility in its protagonist, there could be something transcendent, rather than merely quite good here.
And yet again, if it was my dad, I can’t pretend I would veer toward a complicated view of faults and favorables alike in lieu of a lionizing depiction of someone I love dearly. From that lens, it’s remarkable that the film is as willing to explore Mr. Williams’ failings and blind spots as it is. I wish King Richard were different, but I can’t blame the Williams family or the filmmakers for producing the movie they made.