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Challengers (2024)

Tennis player turned coach Tashi has taken her husband, Art, and transformed him into a world-famous Major champion. To jolt him out of his recent losing streak, she signs him up for a "Challenger" event — close to the lowest level of pro tournament — where he finds himself standing across the net from his former best friend and Tashi's former boyfriend.
4.5 / 5
INCLUVIE SCORE
4.0 / 5
MOVIE SCORE
Representation
Black
LGBTQ
Women

Incluvie Movie Reviews


Jodie Huang
July 23, 2025
4.5 / 5
INCLUVIE SCORE
4 / 5
MOVIE SCORE

Challengers—Blurring the Lines of Platonic and Romantic Love

In a world plagued by black and white sentiments of romance, Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers aims to paint over these lines—highlighting the brilliantly vivid spectrum of human bonds.

From the very opening sequence, Art Donaldson (Mike Faist) and Patrick Zweig (Josh O’Connor) are head-to-head in an intense tennis match as an audience, with Tashi Duncan (Zendaya) in the front and center, watches on. It is after this scene, from a myriad of flashbacks placed carefully and deliberately throughout the rest of the film, that the unspoken tension between the three characters is expanded upon. Teenage Art and Patrick, once best of friends, meet Tashi—a headstrong female tennis player with more than enough potential and skill to pursue a professional career—and both immediately pine for her. Tashi, knowing this and sensing the intimate connection between Art and Patrick, strings them both along—making out with the both of them before directing them to each other before leaning back to watch the two boys now kissing, basking in the satisfaction of her doing. Before leaving, she pits the two against each other—promising that the winner of their tennis match the following day would receive her number. Patrick would come to win the match against Art, becoming her boyfriend. Why is it, then, that Art ultimately becomes Tashi’s husband and not Patrick?

Some time later, Patrick and Tashi get into a heated fight before one of Tashi’s tennis matches—leading to a career-ending injury and an explosive break-up, with Art siding with Tashi against his best friend. Despite her own path now cut short, Tashi isn’t deterred from continuing to pull the strings behind the scenes. She steps into a kingmaker role after becoming Art’s new tennis coach—seemingly willing to do anything to push Art to greatness again. It begs the question whether she is acting out of Art’s best interest or her own—a similar sentiment to how she’d treated Patrick as a boyfriend throughout college. As Art falls into a slump, she orchestrates a master plan in order to help Art regain his footing in the professional scene—involving the very rift she’d created in the first place. It’s powerful, devious—and combined with Zendaya’s confident portrayal, it’s masterful.

Though Guadagnino does not give his audience enough time to piece together the overarching symbolism before handing it over on a silver platter, the metaphor itself is executed expertly. Using tennis as its focal point, Challengers demonstrates the push and pull of connections between people—beginning all the way back from psychosexual development between Art and Patrick from when they were pre-teens and leading eventually, years later, into a messy yet colorful throuple dynamic with Tashi.

While the two heterosexual relationships are explored extensively, the same-sex relationship between Art and Patrick—especially as lines blurred between platonic and romantic—is not as well-defined. Without this third and equally important side, the story becomes more shallow—presenting itself more as a loveless cheating narrative rather than one displaying the various facets of love as the film intended. After Art and Patrick’s falling out, both men clearly lose sight of their passion for tennis, becoming worse off as a result. The ending then knits them back together, both remembering their love for the sport and each other, placing major significance on the relationship between them. Unfortunately, due to the lack of depth, the abrupt ending comes off as confusing and inadequate.

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Movie Information


Tennis player turned coach Tashi has taken her husband, Art, and transformed him into a world-famous Major champion. To jolt him out of his recent losing streak, she signs him up for a "Challenger" event — close to the lowest level of pro tournament — where he finds himself standing across the net from his former best friend and Tashi's former boyfriend.

Rating:R
Genre:Drama, Romance
Directed By:Luca Guadagnino
Written By:Justin Kuritzkes
In Theaters:4/26/2024
Box Office:$94,182,533
Runtime:132 minutes
Studio:Pascal Pictures, Why Are You Acting? Productions, Frenesy Film, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Cast


Director

Luca Guadagnino

Director

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cast

Zendaya

Tashi Donaldson

cast

Mike Faist

Art Donaldson

cast

Josh O'Connor

Patrick Zweig

cast

Darnell Appling

Umpire (New Rochelle Final)

cast

Bryan Doo

Art's Physiotherapist

cast

Shane T Harris

Art's Security Guard

cast

Nada Despotovich

Tashi's Mother

cast

Joan Mcshane

Line Judge (New Rochelle Final)

cast

Chris Fowler

TV Sports Commentator (Atlanta 2019)

cast

Mary Joe Fernández

TV Sports Commentator (Atlanta 2019)

cast

A.J. Lister

Lily