It premiered at the48th Telluride Film Festival on September 2, 2021, and was theatrically released on November 19, 2021, byWarner Bros. Pictures and on theHBO Max streaming service.[4] Although it was a box office failure, grossing $39 million against a budget of $50 million, the film received positive reviews from critics, with praise for the screenplay and the performances of Smith, Ellis, and Sidney.[5]
Richard Williams lives inCompton, California, with his wifeBrandy, his three step-daughtersTunde, Isha and Lyndrea, and his two daughters,Venus andSerena. Richard aspires to turn Venus and Serena into professional tennis players.
Richard has prepared a plan for their success since before they were born. He and Brandy coach Venus and Serena on a daily basis, while also working as a security guard and a nurse, respectively. Richard works tirelessly to find a professional coach for the girls, creating brochures and videotapes to advertise their skills, but has not had success.
One day, Richard takes the girls to see coach Paul Cohen, who is in the middle of practicing withJohn McEnroe andPete Sampras. Despite his initial reservations, he agrees to watch the girls practice, and is impressed.
However, the Williamses cannot afford professional coaching, and Paul refuses to coach both girls for free; he selects Venus to receive his coaching, while Serena continues to practice with Brandy. Paul encourages Venus to participate injuniors tournaments. She quickly finds success, but Richard stresses to Venus and her sister that they should remain humble despite their success.
At one of Venus's tournaments, Serena also signs up to play, unbeknownst to Richard. As both girls continue to succeed, the family feel like outsiders among the predominantly white, upper-class competition. Richard meets with high-profile agents, but, fearing his daughters will be taken advantage of, pulls them out of the junior circuit entirely. Paul insists his decision will destroy the girls’ chances to turn pro, but Richard stands firm, firing him as a coach.
CoachRick Macci travels to California to see the girls play. Impressed, he takes the girls on, and the family relocates toFlorida to train at his facility. Richard surprises Rick by reiterating that the girls will not play juniors, instead training and attending school like normal little girls.
In the ensuing three years, questions arise from the media and from Rick about Richard's strategy with the girls and his desire for media exposure. Venus tells Rick that she wants to turn pro. Richard reluctantly agrees, but later reneges, worrying that she will suffer a similar fate to Rick's pupilJennifer Capriati, who is allegedly suffering from burnout and has been arrested for drug possession.
The decision strains Richard's relationships with Venus, Brandy, and Rick. After an argument with Brandy, he reconciles with Venus, agreeing to let her play in the upcomingBank of the West Classic inOakland. Before the tournament, the family meets with a Nike executive, who offers them a major sponsorship deal worth 3 million dollars. Rick urges them to accept, but the family collectively agrees to decline, believing that once Venus begins to play she will attract more lucrative offers.
Venus initially struggles in her first professional match againstShaun Stafford, but eventually triumphs. She comes in as a heavy underdog in her next match against top-seededArantxa Sánchez Vicario. Venus takes the first set and leads in the second before Vicario takes an extended bathroom break, an apparent act ofgamesmanship. Sánchez Vicario recovers to win the second set and the match.
Richard and Brandy comfort a dejected Venus, telling her to be proud. As the family leaves the stadium, a large crowd of supporters is waiting to cheer her on, and Rick tells Richard that several major shoe companies are anxious to meet with Venus.
The project was announced in March 2019 withWill Smith set to play Williams, fromZach Baylin's screenplay, which appeared on the 2018 "Black List" of the most-liked unproduced screenplays.[8][9] Smith was paid $40 million for his involvement.[10]Warner Bros. was the successful bidder for the film.[11]Reinaldo Marcus Green signed as director in June.[12]
Principal photography began in January 2020 inLos Angeles.[20] According to theCalifornia Film Commission, the production spent $35.6 million in the state, with $7.5 million returned in tax credits.[1] In March 2020, filming was halted due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[21] In October 2020,Tony Goldwyn joined the cast, replacing Schreiber, who dropped out due to a scheduling conflict as a result of the pandemic. Filming resumed later that month.[22]
Will Smith reportedly received $40 million for his role. When production concluded, he reportedly gave his co-stars "a nice bonus" via checks, due to the decision to release the film in theatres and on HBO Max simultaneously, on top of the compensation already received from the studio.[23]
Kris Bowers composed the film score, after previously working on Green'sMonsters and Men (2018). He produced the musical score mostly through the help of a prepared piano, understanding how Venus and Serena changed the game of tennis, and used nails, ping pong balls and several other objects to use it as a percussive instrument along with drums.[24][25] The film features the original song "Be Alive" byBeyoncé, released on November 12, 2021.[26] The song was also included in the film's soundtrack, released byWaterTower Music on the same date.
The film premiered at theTelluride Film Festival on September 2, 2021,[27] and was released on November 19, 2021, in theaters and onHBO Max.[28] It was previously scheduled to be released on November 25, 2020,[29] but it was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[30] The film was chosen to close theAFI Fest on November 14, 2021;[31] that same day, it closed the New Orleans Film Festival's live screenings. By the end of its run, it was also screened at film festivals inLondon,[32]Chicago,[33]Savannah,[34]Miami,[35]Indianapolis,[36]Denver,[37] Middleburg,[38]Philadelphia,[39]Sydney,[40]Toruń,[41] andMorelia.[42] The film will also open the 25thAmerican Black Film Festival (ABFF), with president and general manager Nicole Friday describingKing Richard as "a film that is a touchstone of ABFF's legacy of showcasing extraordinary Black talent and inspiring storytelling reflecting the brilliance of diversity in Hollywood."[43]
Samba TV reported toDeadline Hollywood that the film was streamed by 707,000 U.S. households on HBO Max in its first 3 days of release on the platform. In addition, it stated that 59% of the viewers were female and 54%African Americans. HBO Max Executive Vice President and General Manager Andy Forssell praised the film for being watched without interruptions unlike other day-and-date titles, whileWarner Bros. Pictures Chairman and Chief Content OfficerToby Emmerich stated that the company was pleased with the film's initial streaming performance.[46] It was streamed by nearly 2 million U.S. households by the end of its first 30 days on HBO Max.[47] By March 20, the film had been streamed in 2.6 million households in the United States, including 403,000 since the Oscar nomination announcements on February 8.[48]
King Richard grossed $15.1million in the United States and Canada, and $24.3million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $39.4million.[2][3]
In the United States and Canada, the film was released alongsideGhostbusters: Afterlife, and was projected to gross $8–10 million from 3,250 theaters in its opening weekend.[49] The film made $1.9 million on its first day, and went on to debut to $5.7 million.[50] The low figure was attributed to the 145 minute runtime, as well as the film's availability on HBO Max.[51] The film made $4.8 million over the five-dayThanksgiving frame, including $3.3 million (-33%) in its second weekend, finishing seventh.[52] In its third weekend, the film earned $1.2 million, finishing ninth.[53]King Richard dropped out of the box office top ten in its fourth weekend, earning $510,306 and finishing twelfth.[54]
Both Venus and Serena are listed as executive producers on the film, a title they approved only after viewing the finished product. Serena said: "I think it was a great opportunity to see how amazing African-American fathers are. A lot of black men aren't seen in that light. And a lot of people think that my dad was a different character. He wanted us to have fun first over anything. That's the thing that I loved most."[55] According to Serena and Venus, the film is as true to reality "as possible."[56]
While praising Will Smith's performance,Arantxa Sánchez expressed dissatisfaction at her portrayal as an antagonist in the film, stating that the real events had been different and that she had not taken the toilet break shown.[57]
On thereview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes, 90% of 292 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The website's consensus reads: "King Richard transcends sport biopic formulas with refreshingly nuanced storytelling – and a towering performance from Will Smith in the title role."[58] OnMetacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 76 out of 100, based on 53 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[59] Audiences polled byCinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, while those atPostTrak gave it a 94% positive score, with 89% saying they would definitely recommend it.[51]
Kevin Maher ofThe Times gave the film four out of five stars, writing: "A towering turn from Will Smith, his best sinceAli and one of the year's great screen performances, defines nearly every frame of this film."[60]Justin Chang of theLos Angeles Times described the film as "an engrossing family drama that doubles as a sharp rethink of how a family operates within the overlapping, often overbearing spheres of race, class, sports and celebrity."[61]
Joe Morgenstern ofThe Wall Street Journal criticized the film's length, but said that it was "a sports movie that transcends itself without losing track of itself."[62] Wendy Ide ofThe Guardian gave the film four out of five stars, describing it as a "crowd-pleasing biopic" and writing: "Smith is excellent, fully inhabiting the character in one of the only roles to date that has required him to fully shed his habitual gloss of Will Smith charm."[63]
Clarisse Loughrey ofThe Independent also praised Smith's performance, writing: "It's one of those impressive fusions between actor and character, which all comes across so effortlessly onscreen, but givesKing Richard the lifeblood it needs to triumph as a film."[64]
K. Austin Collins ofRolling Stone wrote: "The movie's brightest-burning idea, and it is sincerely moving, is that Richard, for his flaws, does what he does on behalf of the young black women he's raising. This rings true in real life and in fiction."[65][66]
Allegra Frank ofSlate was more critical of the film, writing: "Venus and Serena Williams are the names we rightly remember, butKing Richard remains fixated on the male bravado that pushed for them to get their names out there in the first place."[67]Kyle Smith ofNational Review wrote that the film "makes the sororal tennis champs seem almost incidental to their own rise to greatness."[68] Jesse Hassenger ofThe A.V. Club gave the film a grade of C+, writing that it "keeps enough of Richard's messy past off screen to feel like a hagiography with a few concessions, rather than a true warts-and-all portrait."[69]