Christy Review: Sydney Sweeney Carries a Christy Martin Biopic That Shows All of the Trauma, Not Enough of the Influence

Sydney Sweeney in Christy (2025)
Sydney Sweeney in Christy (2025)

Sydney Sweeney carries Christy (2025) with a performance that looks lived in and unshowy, and that commitment keeps the film afloat even when the storytelling settles for the familiar. Playing Christy Martin, Sweeney leans into the rough edges of a lower income West Virginia upbringing, channeling anger before boxing gives it shape. It is another attempt to flip her public persona after Reality. This time the physicality and the emotional beats line up, and she hits them cleanly.

The problem is everything around her. David Michôd opts for an exhaustive, cradle to catastrophe sweep that tracks Christy Martin from childhood through notoriety to the attempted murder in 2010. The scope promises a portrait and delivers a chronology. Ben Foster makes James V. Martin believably menacing, but the characterization rarely moves beyond a single register, which leaves the film repeating scenes of control and cruelty until they blur together.

The approach lands Christy in the same cul-de-sac that swallowed Blonde, Back to Black, and many other recent biopics. The script is most energized by the ugliest chapters and often stages them with a kind of dutiful severity. Trauma becomes the center of gravity, and the film circles it again and again while giving less attention to Christy Martin’s standing in women’s boxing or to how her presence changed the sport’s landscape. The result is blunt. You leave with a list of injuries and too little sense of the fighter who made space for others.

Michôd does what he has done capably in The Rover and The King. He builds rundown spaces you can almost smell and he keeps bodies readable in the ring. The fights are staged with clear geography and a respect for the toll between rounds. The craft choices are competent and sometimes striking, yet the film too often feels like a well mounted reenactment that mistakes relentlessness for depth. The tone is confident, the perspective is thin.

There are bright spots at the margins. Sweeney finds moments of dry humor and stubborn pride that cut through the misery. A few scenes hint at the public figure behind the headlines, the champion who drew crowds and opened doors. Those flashes arrive, do their job, and disappear under the next onslaught of calamity. The structure keeps rushing forward to the next crisis and rarely pauses to show what survival looked like in the years that were not emergencies.

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I did not hate Christy. I just felt the shape of it from the first act and watched it play the expected notes. It is sturdy, grim, and respectable in the ways biopics often are. It is also limited by its fixation on pain and its reluctance to focus. A tighter frame, perhaps a few charged days or a single chapter of Christy Martin’s life, might have produced something sharper and more revealing. As a Sydney Sweeney showcase, it mostly lands. As a portrait of Christy Martin, it leaves too much unsaid.

Score: 5/10

Christy (2025)

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