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When Billie Beat Bobby
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Directed by Jane Anderson
This 2001 TV docudrama relates the story of tennis' 1973 "Battle of the Sexes" between Wimbledon champions Billie Jean King (Holly Hunter) and Bobby Riggs (Ron Silver), an event considered by many to be an early victory for feminism. Riggs, 20 years past his prime, lives to wager on anything and everything. Seeing the rise of feminism, he decides he can make some money by challenging top female players, 30 years his junior, into exhibition matches. His first choice for an opponent is Billie Jean King, but she turns him down because she is too busy organizing the members of the female tennis tour into a de facto union, and winning tennis tournaments. After Bobby defeats the number one female tennis player in the world, Margaret Court, King realizes she needs to beat him. Following months of hype in which Bobby's bluster is matched at every point by Billie's confidence, the two face off in the Astrodome before a huge live and television audience. When Billie Beat Bobby was written and directed by Jane Anderson who had previously written The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader Murdering Mom, which also featured Holly Hunter in the title role. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
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The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs resonated deeply in a country on the crest of a vast feminist movement. When Billie Beat Bobby director Jane Anderson illustrates the state of feminism in the country by equating it to women's tennis in the early '70s. The women players, dismissed because they are too beautiful (Chris Everett) and demure (Margaret Court), or too aggressive (King and Rosie Casals), are attempting to get the same pay for major tournaments as their male counterparts (a controversy that still raged in the tennis world when this movie first aired in 2001). Anderson establishes the parallels between the tennis world and the real world with great economy and skill. Holly Hunter captures the focused intensity and quick wit which made King both a world champion player, and a superb broadcaster. Ron Silver embodies Riggs' showmanship as well as his pathetic need for the spotlight. Silver could have easily made Riggs a fool, but instead he is a complex, engaging figure. The climactic tennis match works because Anderson and the actors have done such a fine job making the audience understand what this match means to Billie and Bobby as individuals, as well as what it means to the women and men of the country. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 

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