Status
Released
original language
sv
Budget
$ 7500000
Revenue
$ 16657800

Björn Borg

John McEnroe

Lennart Bergelin

Mariana Simionescu

Younger Björn Borg

Young Björn Borg

Young John McEnroe

Peter Fleming

John McEnroe Senior

Vitas Gerulaitis

UK Commentator George Barnes

Kay McEnroe

Björn Borg's Agent #2

Bengt Grive

Jimmy Connors

Talk Show Host

Psychologist

Mr. Henderson

National Teamplayer #2

Södertälje Tennis Coach

Borg's fan (uncredited)


British Commentator

Umpire Wimbledon Final

Rune Borg

Margareta Borg

Björn Borg's agent #1

Arthur Ashe

Mats Hasselqvist

chairman Södertälje

Phil, John's agent

Lennart Hyland

Tabac owner

tennis coach Stockholm

Argentine tv reporter

Mrs. Henderson

french commentator

american commentator Butch Waltz

french commentator

Argentinian TV translator

Brian Gottfried

Ilie Nastase

Ismail El Shafei

Rod Frawley

Ove Bengtsson

Kjell Johansson

Tenny Svensson

American Commentator


Written by John Chard on 2020-03-28
You can't be serious! Borg vs McEnroe is directed by Janus Metz and written by Ronnie Sandahl. It stars Sverrir Gudnason, Shia LaBeouf, Stellan Skarsgård and Tuva Novotny. The Swedish Björn Borg (Gudnason) and the American John McEnroe (LaBeouf), the best tennis players in the world, maintain a legendary duel during the 1980 Wimbledon tournament. Cut to the chase, this is one for tennis fans to gorge upon, but even then it's a bit too lop sided to fully delight. Being a Swedish production it's heavily loaded towards the personal worries that were plaguing Borg in the very early 1980s. Sadly this renders McEnroe - one of the games greatest and most colourful characters - as being a support player in what set out to be a biographical pic about sports rivalry. However, what does come across is that both men were driven and actually both were tits for varying reasons. There's unsurprisingly some parental pressures, while Borg feels the strain of breaking records (as his wife chain smokes) and McEnroe strives to get on the ladder to greatness. Sure the tennis sequences don't hold up to scrutiny but both Gudnason and LaBeouf (excellent and excellently cast) come out of the physicalities very well. Ultimately it's a character study that doesn't delve too deeply for equal parties, but come the 1980 Wimbledon final, with one of the greatest 4th sets ever played, you should be hard pressed not to rejoice. Not only in the sport of tennis played to the max, but in how two supposed rivals actually became the best of friends. 7/10