The tennis scenes in Zendaya-led Challengers are the sex scenes: director wanted to show ‘back and forth’ of love triangle

“The ball is the ephemeral, invisible force of desire,” says Guadagnino, the director of Call Me By Your Name and Bones and All. “I wanted to show desire going back and forth.”
Director Luca Guadagnino on the set of Challengers. Photo: AP
The result, by a score of about six-love, is the love triangle of the year. Challengers, which Amazon MGM Studios releases in cinemas on April 26, takes the melodrama of the threesome and gives it a breathless, bi-curious spin.

That is especially because of the multilateral chemistry between Zendaya, O’Connor and Faist – all actors in their late 20s or early 30s, all very capable of smouldering when called upon.

What’s special is that the three of us got to lead the movie. That is cool. An opportunity to do something like that is so rare.

Josh O’Connor
It is a big-screen statement especially for Zendaya, who is also a producer on the film. She plays Tashi, the wife and coach of tennis superstar Art (Faist, the West Side Story breakout).

Tashi was only relegated to the sidelines because of a career-ending knee injury – though it did little to sap her ambition. When Art, whose passion for tennis is fading, is matched in New Rochelle against an old friend, Patrick (O’Connor, star of Alice Rohrwacher’s recent La Chimera), their complicated past is, deliciously, resurrected.

Zendaya gravitated to the project not because it seemed a natural fit for her, but because it was not.

Zendaya attends a premiere for Challengers in Los Angeles. Photo: Reuters

“Because it sounded like a challenge. Because it is so different from me,” Zendaya says in an interview alongside her co-stars. “Sometimes when you’re a little afraid to tackle something like that you, you’re like, ‘Ooh, maybe I should do it.’ I don’t want to walk into something and be like, ‘I got this. This is going to be easy.’”

“What’s special is that the three of us got to lead the movie. That is cool,” says O’Connor. “An opportunity to do something like that is so rare.”

“Sometimes I’ve been a part of big ensembles,” adds Zendaya, who co-starred in the recent Dune: Part Two. “But it’s just the three of us. We are the cast. While we obviously have other amazing actors that contribute, this is the core thing here. Tennis training and the rehearsal period, it was just us. So thank god that we like each other.”
Faist and Zendaya in a scene from Challengers. Photo: AP

Guadagnino, known for his organic way of working, compares the weeks he and the three stars spent together preparing to “kids on the beach creating castles of sand”.

Although Faist has some ability, the rest were hopeless at tennis. Guadagnino had not picked up a racquet in his life before stepping onto the set in Challengers. Famed tennis coach Brad Gilbert was brought in to help.

But Challengers is not really about tennis; that is just the arena where attraction and emotion in the film ultimately spills out. When it is pointed out to Guadagnino that the tennis scenes are essentially his movie’s sex scenes, he responds, “Thank you.”

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Producer Amy Pascal first brought Challengers to Zendaya, a fittingly full-circle moment considering that Pascal cast Zendaya in her big-screen breakthrough, 2017’s Spider-Man: Homecoming.

Challengers signals a shift into more mature screen roles for the 27-year-old who, from a young age as a Disney television star, had the responsibly of fame and providing for her family on her shoulders.

“Something I deal with personally is the idea of what I should want, or what people want for me,” Zendaya says. “I empathise with that in Tashi but also in Art because he’s playing for two people. He’s not just selfishly playing for his own joy any more, he’s playing for someone else.”

Zendaya in a scene from Challengers. Photo: AP
O’Connor, who portrayed Prince Charles in Netflix series The Crown, shot the film La Chimera – playing a character he more closely identified with – in between a very different role in Challengers.

“He is front-footed, he’s overly confident – all these qualities that I’ve always admired and always wanted that I’ve never quite been able to have. Just to play it and be in his shoes for a few months was bliss,” says O’Connor. “That is what I’ll hold on to with Patrick.

“I really like Patrick. I know he’s problematic but I really like him. I find him hilarious and charming and he knows himself. And those are all qualities that I don’t necessarily have but I admire in him.”

Zendaya, Faist and O’Connor attend a premiere for Challengers in Los Angeles. Photo: Reuters

The connections and challenges each star brought to Challengers added up to a remarkably intimate drama and a potentially career-shifting experience. Even Guadagnino, who generally prefers editing to shooting, found his time on hard court with Zendaya, O’Connor and Faist to be enthralling.

“It was joyous and it was nice and it was energetic,” says Guadagnino. “It was a good company.”

Reference

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