Venus & Serena (FILM REVIEW)
Venus & Serena
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Revealing Biopic Examines Roots and Rise of World-Class Williams Sisters
Richard Williams was born and raised
in Shreveport, Louisiana where he was left traumatized by having
a railroad spike driven through his leg for refusing to behave deferentially
towards a gang of white racists. Understandably, that experience played a
significant role in shaping the youngster into the highly-ambitious and
fiercely-overprotective father he would later become.
In fact, well before his daughters
Venus and Serena were even born, he hand wrote a 78-page game plan for their
lives. Its foundation was laid in childhood, where they would not only be homeschooled
but forged into professional tennis players.
Achieving that dream would be no
small feat, given that the girls were to grow up poor in Compton, an L.A.
ghetto far removed from the privileged background considered necessary to compete
on the championship level. Sadly, upon turning pro, rather than being immediately
embraced by California crowds, elder sister Venus was called the “N-word” by local
fans who preferred to root for her European counterparts.
Nevertheless, having been prepared
by their dad for just such a reaction to the presence on center court, both young
ladies miraculously managed to rise in stature on the circuit. All of the above
is chronicled in captivating fashion in Venus and Serena, an intimate biopic
co-directed by Michelle Major and Maiken Baird who were allowed to follow the
pair around with a camera for over a year.
Besides
detailing the ups-and-downs of the turbulent, 2011 tennis season, this riveting
and revealing documentary treats the audience to an intimate look at the
close-knit sisters with the help of home movies from their adolescence. Featuring
appearances by Chris Rock, Bill Clinton and Serena’s ex-boyfriend Common, this flick
is at its best when Richard Williams is given the floor in archival footage to make audacious
predictions about turning not one but two of his daughters into world-class
tennis players.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 99 minutes
Distributor: Magnolia
Pictures
To see a trailer for Venus
and Serena, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvMWjtQN5HU
No comments:
Post a Comment