I, Tonya
The world of skating
Brought to its knees in one blow
What a testament.
Disclaimer: Please bear with me as I attempt to write this review over two weeks after seeing “I, Tonya” without having taken any notes at the time or reading any reviews now to jog (read: muddle) my memory.
As far as biopics go, “I, Tonya” probably has to be up there as one of my favorites. Why, you ask? It’s hilarious. Why is it hilarious, you ask? Editing and structure, for one, and the very solid performances by everyone involved for another. Let’s start with editing and structure, which is what primarily sets the tone for the movie. The movie is set up so that interviews with the characters are dispersed throughout the true-to-life story, and the cuts are always hilarious. The movie is at its funniest when it breaks the fourth wall, and one of the most memorable moments when it does this is when Tonya “allegedly” chases her now ex-husband out the house with a shotgun (but of course, a hefty chunk of this scene is given away in the trailer.) There’s a special place in my heart for movies with unreliable narrators.
By now, it’s no secret that Allison Janney and Margot Robbie are getting rave reviews for their performances as Tonya and her hard-ass mom, respectively, but they really do deserve the praise. I’ve never been able to call myself a fan of Margot Robbie, but I am now. She’s practically unrecognizable in the titular role, and she effortlessly plays Harding throughout her various life stages, from a young and awkward teenager to a rising star, and finally to the washed-up, bitter nobody she becomes in the talking heads cuts. I also want to shout out Mckenna Grace, the "Gifted" star who plays the young Tonya Harding. I never saw "Gifted" because it brought back nightmares from my own elementary school experience in enrichment classes, but now I think I’ll have to revisit it. Grace was the perfect casting choice here, as she matches the funniness, determination and naïveté that Robbie brings to the role in the rest of the movie.
This is only the second movie I’ve seen about the world of competitive figure skating, but I have to say it blows the skates off Ice Princess, (sorry Michelle Trachtenberg).