Christy – Review and Summary
While the boxing in Christy is lackluster, the story of Jim and Christy’s relationship compensates.

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“Christy” Film Details
- Director(s): David Michôd
- Writer(s): Mirrah Foulkes, David Michôd
- Based On Work By: Katherine Fugate
- Distributor: Black Bear
- Runtime: 2 Hour(s) and 15 Minutes
- Public Release Date (In Theaters): November 7, 2025
- Genre(s): Drama, LGBT+, Biopic, Sports
- Content Rating: Rated R
- Primary Language: English
- Official Site Link
Movie Summary
With a general lack of support from her parents, Christy found herself unsure of what to do with her life, and the constant threat of being cut off for being a queer woman didn’t help. Enter boxing, later Jim Martin, who gave Christy that direction, support, and even means of appeasing her father, but especially her mother. But, despite a good few years, eventually the fantasy Christy made got dispelled by reality, and sadly, like many people, it took damn near dying for her to get her life on track.
Cast and Characters
Christy (Sydney Sweeney)
- Check out other productions we’ve covered starring this actor: [Link to Actor’s Tag]
- Character Summary: Hailing from West Virginia, since she was a teenager, Christy has been queer and has even had a girlfriend. Fighting, though, was something she stumbled into, and because she didn’t have much going on when discovered, she made what was barely a hobby into a career.
Jim (Ben Foster)
- Check out other productions we’ve covered starring this actor: [Link to Actor’s Tag]
- Character Summary: Jim was a trainer, introduced to Christy by a third party, and, since they had met before women’s boxing was gaining traction, he didn’t want to waste time on her. However, with her able to take down a guy, he saw her potential, and once she was clearly capable of making money, he took advantage of their relationship, and the one she wanted with her parents.
What To Expect In “Christy” (Rated R) – Content Overview
- Dialog:
- Cursing: Throughout
- Discriminatory Language: Yes
- Graphic Imagery or Violence:
- Gun Violence: Attempted Murder
- Domestic Violence: Yes
- Gore/ Blood/ Body Horror: Bleeding, Depiction of Open Wounds
- Notable Violence: Intense Fight Scenes
- Sexual Content:
- Sexual Situations: Implied
- Miscellaneous:
- Drinking: Yes
- Drug Use: Recreational
- Vomiting: Yes
- Smoking: Yes
Review and Commentary
Highlight(s)
Christy’s Personal Life [82/100]
Quite honestly, the early part of the film, with Merritt Wever giving a stereotypical conservative southern woman, is not that great. Sweeney, too, with lacking chemistry with anyone early on, also pushed the idea that while she may have screen presence, she may have been thrust too soon into being the lead vs. one of the leads – never mind helm a biopic. However, as we reach the mid-way point and Katy O’Brian, as Lisa, becomes someone for Sweeney to play off and Ben Foster shows the dark side of Jim Martin, then Sweeney shines and begins to shed the image of being just another beautiful actress and, perhaps taking inspiration from Charlize Theron in Monster, you see less of the beauty and more of the person.
Thus making it so, when things go from bad to damn near deadly, Sweeney is gone, you are focused on Christy’s story, and wondering if she is going to live to find peace and joy, or die with her reputation.
Chad L. Coleman Makes Me Hope There Is A Don King Biopic In The Works Or Out There [83/100]
While there is the 1997 movie Don King: Only In America, it seems like it is time for a big-screen version of his story. Don King is probably one of the most well-known boxing promoters, and in sports, the only name that may be more recognizable is Vince McMahon, if you consider WWF/E sports entertainment. And when it comes to Christy, Chad L. Coleman eats up anyone and everyone he is in a scene with. Be it Sweeney, Foster, whoever, there is no sharing the spotlight, making others look good. Coleman gives you the real boxing matches, and no one seemed prepped to share a scene and hold their own against him.
Low Point(s)
Christy’s Boxing Career and Fights [64/100]
While I won’t doubt Sydney Sweeney trained to be a compelling boxer, the way the matches are shot, edited, and built up was terrible. I’d even go as far as to say that, even with the amount of time the boxing matches take, they feel like an obligation. Hence why Don King can come and go like it is nothing, that Christy can literally skip whenever Christy had her first title match and won a belt, and the only notable fight is the one with Laila Ali. Everyone else, including Christy’s eventual wife, Lisa? Watching Christy fight them is like watching John Wick take on a henchman. They just come and go, and you barely remember a thing about them.
Which feels disrespectful in a way. Not just to Christy’s opponents but to her career. It is often pushed that she was the top, the first, notable accolades, but rarely do you get the sense that, like Laila Ali, the best female boxer, potentially of all time, Christy’s name should be mentioned when speaking of women’s boxing.
Overall
Our Rating (76/100): Mixed (Divisive)
While Christy’s boxing career is made into damn near an afterthought, there is no denying that the weight of being a queer woman, unhappily married to an insecure man, is front and center. But, at times, Chad L. Coleman captures the spotlight, and while Sydney Sweeney definitely alters the perception of who she is as an actress, the question becomes: Can she be consistent?
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