Christy is a 2025 American biographical sports drama film directed by David Michôd, written by Michôd and Mirrah Foulkes, and starring Sydney Sweeney, Ben Foster, Merritt Wever, Katy O'Brian, Ethan Embry, and Chad L. Coleman. The film chronicles the rise of former professional boxer Christy Martin (Sweeney) to becoming America's best-known female boxer in the 1990s, and later her coach-turned-husband's 2010 attempted murder of her.
The film had its world premiere at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival on September 5, 2025, in the Special Presentations section. It was released theatrically on November 7, 2025, by Black Bear Pictures, earning $1.3 million in its opening weekend in the United States, which Box Office Mojo classified as one of the top 12 worst openings for a new release that opened on over 2,000 screens. As a result, the film has been considered a box-office bomb. It opened at #11 at the box office, outside the top ten, and fell to #23 by its second week. The film received mixed reviews from critics, though the performances were praised.
In 1989 Itmann, West Virginia, college basketball player Christy Salters enters a local female boxing competition and wins. Impressed by her skills, local boxing coach James Martin contacts Christy and offers to coach her. Christy is initially ambivalent about pursuing boxing, but her raw talent and success at the sport motivate her to continue pursuing it. Meanwhile, her secret relationship with her high-school girlfriend, Rosie, falls apart, and Christy's homophobic mother, Joyce, is troubled by rumors that Christy is a lesbian, causing tension within the family.
By 1995, Christy has moved to Apopka, Florida, with James and opened a gym. James exhibits controlling behavior, but their relationship has become sexual despite Christy's homosexuality. The couple marry, which pleases Christy's family, particularly Joyce. James, acting as Christy's coach and manager, fails to keep promises to facilitate career connections for her, but the couple manage to arrange a meeting with Don King, a prolific boxing promoter with whom she signs a contract. A series of successes follow, including a win against Lisa Holewyne, an out lesbian whom an insecure Christy publicly jokes about.
Christy's rise to fame continues, affording her and James a comfortable life. In a career high, Christy defeats Deirdre Gogarty in a Las Vegas match at the MGM Grand, marking the first female boxing competition to be shown on pay-per-view television. Her profile continues to rise as she becomes the first female boxer on the cover of Sports Illustrated. Don warns Christy about her bravado and patronizing attitude toward her competitors, fearing it may lead to her downfall.
In 2003, at James's suggestion, Christy is appointed to fight Laila Ali, feigning a higher weight class to do so. James hires Lisa to help train her, but Christy loses to Ali. Meanwhile, James's controlling nature has progressed to physical abuse, which is suspected by Jeff, Christy's ringside support and a trainer at her and James's gym. The couple also develop a codependent cocaine addiction. Christy confides in her mother about James's abuse and manipulation, which includes forcing Christy to engage in filmed sex acts, but Joyce dismisses it as drug-induced paranoia.
By 2010, Christy's and James's relationship has significantly deteriorated. Jeff tells Christy that James has been stealing money from her for years, leading to a violent confrontation. Determined to leave James, Christy seeks support from Rosie, whom she reconnects with, only to find herself stalked by James. James sends clips from the sex tapes he has made with Christy to her peers and family members before claiming Christy has left him for Rosie, publicly outing her. A defiant Christy returns to their home, where James stabs her multiple times and flays her calf muscle before shooting Christy in the chest with a pistol. Christy manages to flee the house and is saved by a passerby who rushes her to a hospital.
At the hospital, Joyce blames Rosie for James's attack. During her convalescence, Christy is visited by Lisa, to whom she apologizes for her previous hostility, and the two reconcile. Christy returns to her gym, where she is embraced by Jeff and the other staff. Christy resumes boxing without James, who is sentenced to 25 years in prison for attempted second-degree murder. Intertitles reveal that Christy and Lisa married in 2017, and that Christy has become an advocate for victims of domestic violence.
In May 2024, it was announced that a biographical film about the former professional boxer Christy Martin was in production, with David Michôd set to direct, and a screenplay written by Michôd and Mirrah Foulkes.
In May 2024, it was announced that the film was being introduced to international buyers at the Marché du Film at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival. The film was expected to begin principal photography in the fall of 2024. It was produced by Kerry Kohansky-Roberts, David Michôd, Justin Lothrop, Brent Stiefel, Sydney Sweeney, and Teddy Schwarzman, and executive-produced by Michael Heimler, John Friedberg, Mirrah Foulkes, Brad Zimmerman, David Levine, Ryan Schwartz, and Nick Shumaker. Production companies involved with the film are Anonymous Content, Yoki, Inc., Votiv, Fifty-Fifty Films, and Black Bear Pictures.
Christy is played by Sydney Sweeney. In September 2024, it was announced that Ben Foster, Merritt Wever, Katy O'Brian, Ethan Embry, Jess Gabor, and Chad L. Coleman had joined the cast.
To prepare for the role, Sweeney trained extensively in boxing and weightlifting, gaining over during the process. She also performed her own stunts in the film, refusing to use a stunt double for the boxing sequences.
Principal photography began by September 30, 2024, in North Carolina, and wrapped on November 15, 2024. Filming occurred in the cities of Gastonia, Charlotte, and the Lake Norman area. Martin was involved in the making of the film and spent some time on the set.
Antony Partos composed the score for the film.
It had its world premiere at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival on September 5, 2025. Before its Toronto premiere, Black Bear Pictures was announced to be distributing the film through its U.S. division, releasing it on November 7, 2025.
The film screened in the Icon section of the 2025 Stockholm International Film Festival on November 5, 2025.
The film was released digitally on December 9, 2025, and will be released by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment on Blu-ray and DVD on April 21, 2026.
Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.
After its festival debut, Glenn Garner for Deadline Hollywood summarized reactions, writing, "Some critics have praised Sweeney for disappearing into the role of the professional boxer, others say thatâÂÂs all the movie has going for it." Sonia Rao criticized the screenplay in a 2 out of 4 star review for The Washington Post, calling Christy a "run-of-the-mill biopic that suffers from its inability to convey what truly sets ChristyâÂÂs narrative apart from the rest." In a mixed review for Slant Magazine, Marshall Shaffer wrote that the film "lulls us into complacency by deviating little from the standard inspirational sports-movie playbook. But nestled in the early scenes of the eponymous phenomâÂÂs rise are the seeds of struggle that will bloom in the filmâÂÂs more effective back as her fighting career begins to plateau." Robert Abele of the Los Angeles Times lauded Sweeney's performance but wrote that the film "screams for a treatment grittier than the slick melodrama weâÂÂve been given. ItâÂÂs all highlights and lowlights, rarely interested in the in-between stuff that makes watching all the rounds of a bout so necessary to appreciating what it means to survive on the canvas."
Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail praised the lead performances by Sweeney and Foster but conceded that "too much of director David MichôdâÂÂs film fails to deliver as much as blood, sweat and tears as Sweeney herself offers, the familiar beats and boundaries of a sports biopic constantly forcing its star to bounce against the ropes of convention." Dan Jolin of Time Out awarded the film four out of five stars, praising both the lead and supporting performances. Lisa Kennedy of The New York Times praised Sweeney's lead performance, writing that she "settles into ChristyâÂÂs heft but never overthinks her character, whose innate skills are decades ahead of her self-esteem." The Seattle Timess Jocelyn Noveck wrote, "The mashup of genres may feel a bit tonally rough, but it ultimately works, not least because of its unifying factor: Sweeney, who imbues her no-holds-barred portrayal of Martin with both sweetness and rage, with brio and real vulnerability."
In its opening weekend in the United States, Christy earned $1.3 million, which Box Office Mojo classified as one of the top 12 worst openings for a new release that opened on over 2,000 screens. In its second weekend, the film grossed $108,487, declining by 91.7% and setting a new record for biggest second weekend drop.