The story of the 1980 tennis rivalry between the placid Björn Borg and the volatile John McEnroe.The story of the 1980 tennis rivalry between the placid Björn Borg and the volatile John McEnroe.The story of the 1980 tennis rivalry between the placid Björn Borg and the volatile John McEnroe.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 14 nominations
Julia Marko-Nord
- Margareta Borg
- (as Julia Marko Nord)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBjörn Borg's real-life son, Leo Borg, plays young Björn.
- GoofsThe net on the Centre Court for a singles game is never the doubles net used in the movie.
- Quotes
John McEnroe: You can't be serious! You can not be serious! The ball was on the line! Chalk flew all over, man. The chalk flew up! He saw it. That's why he's walking all over it. Everyone saw it was in. You cannot possibly call that out.
- Crazy creditsAt 00:48 in starting credits, a quote appears on screen credited to Andre Agassi, "Tennis used the language of life: advantage, service, fault, break, love... every match is a life in miniature"
- ConnectionsFeatured in CTV National News: Episode dated 7 September 2017 (2017)
Featured review
It is the 1980 Wimbledon tennis championship. Bjorn Borg is the number 1 tennis player in the world and the undisputed king of Wimbledon. He has won the tournament four times in a row - a fifth consecutive time would be a world first. However, a new face has appeared in the tennis world and presents a serious threat to Borg's title hopes - John McEnroe.
Good movie, and surprisingly so. Seeing Shia LaBeouf in the credits, as McEnroe, made me set my expectations quite low. However, it turned out to be an interesting and exciting movie.
What made the movie good was that it is not a dry, join-the-dots docudrama. There is character development, showing Borg and McEnroe's backgrounds, how their sporting mentalities and personas were formed and how these influence, to the point of determining, their game. Very engaging.
The choice of rivalry contributes to the engagement of the movie. There could not have been more opposite rivals in the world of sport. Borg: the ice-cold, emotionless base-line player. McEnroe: the temperamental, irascible, serve-and-volleyer. The contrast, and how their personalities affect their game, makes for enthralling viewing.
I'm no tennis expert, but the tennis scenes seem very well done and realistic. Also, the mental side of playing sport at the highest level is covered fairly well.
Good performances from Sverrir Gudnason as Borg and Shia LeBeouf as McEnroe. Good support from Stellan Skarsgard and Tuva Novotny.
On the negative side, the coverage of Borg's mental side state seems overwrought and slows down the momentum of the movie. Yes, it was necessary, actually vitally important, to the movie, as it showed the pressure Borg was under and the downsides to fame and being the world Number 1 (at anything). It also provides a good explanation to what would happen later in Borg's career. However, too much of the movie is showing how Borg wrestles with these demons - we got it the first time round, no need to repeat it several times.
In addition, the focus appears mostly on Borg. McEnroe's background is sketched very basically. A bit more balance was necessary.
Good movie, and surprisingly so. Seeing Shia LaBeouf in the credits, as McEnroe, made me set my expectations quite low. However, it turned out to be an interesting and exciting movie.
What made the movie good was that it is not a dry, join-the-dots docudrama. There is character development, showing Borg and McEnroe's backgrounds, how their sporting mentalities and personas were formed and how these influence, to the point of determining, their game. Very engaging.
The choice of rivalry contributes to the engagement of the movie. There could not have been more opposite rivals in the world of sport. Borg: the ice-cold, emotionless base-line player. McEnroe: the temperamental, irascible, serve-and-volleyer. The contrast, and how their personalities affect their game, makes for enthralling viewing.
I'm no tennis expert, but the tennis scenes seem very well done and realistic. Also, the mental side of playing sport at the highest level is covered fairly well.
Good performances from Sverrir Gudnason as Borg and Shia LeBeouf as McEnroe. Good support from Stellan Skarsgard and Tuva Novotny.
On the negative side, the coverage of Borg's mental side state seems overwrought and slows down the momentum of the movie. Yes, it was necessary, actually vitally important, to the movie, as it showed the pressure Borg was under and the downsides to fame and being the world Number 1 (at anything). It also provides a good explanation to what would happen later in Borg's career. However, too much of the movie is showing how Borg wrestles with these demons - we got it the first time round, no need to repeat it several times.
In addition, the focus appears mostly on Borg. McEnroe's background is sketched very basically. A bit more balance was necessary.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Borg McEnroe: La película
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- SEK 165,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $231,346
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $52,625
- Apr 15, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $3,431,867
- Runtime1 hour 47 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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