A bit overrated, but still an amazing film
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
View MoreA clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.
.Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
View MoreA secret organisation abducts fit young women, puts them in push-up bras and tight white vests, and makes them duke it out to the death in a pit. Sounds like guaranteed exploitation heaven, doesn't it? Well it isn't against all the odds, director Josh C. Waller has managed to make this delightfully trashy concept into a really dull film that amounts to little more than a series of repetitive, unimaginative, unconvincing fist-fights between characters that it's hard to give two hoots about.Lead Zoë Bell, a stunt-woman turned actress, does admittedly look like she can handle herself in a fight, with an athletic physique and a face that has clearly taken a bit of a pounding in the past (from a distance, she looks like Sean Penn in Fast Times at Ridgemont High), but the rest of the girls are mere eye-candy, completely unconvincing as bare-knuckle brawlers. Most look like they would give up all hope if they broke so much as a fingernail.Orchestrating the violence for the benefit of an exclusive audience of rich sadists are married couple Joseph (Doug Jones) and Elizabeth (the once sultry Sherilyn Fenn, who needs to update her profile pic to avoid future disappointment). These despicable reprobates predictably get their comeuppance in the final act, when our heroine, Sabrina (Bell), escapes her confines after playing possum during her final fight. Here, we get my personal hilarious highlight (or should that be lowlight?) of the whole film, as Fenn grabs a weapon to try and kill Sabrina—never has an actress looked less comfortable in a fight scene.
View MoreIf someone likes movies that are dark and gritty this could be for you. I saw the description about women that fight to the death and was immediately interested.What may not be immediately obvious though is that this movie also goes into care with the fight scenes. I even think it looks way more realistic then most if not all fight scenes I have seen, which is fantastic. They sound better too.The angles and directing I admired too. Things like the angle something looks while covered in blood can have a chilling affect. I enjoyed this movie visually.The acting and writing I found fantastic as well.
View MoreHow many times did Sabrina turn her back on an adversary before she had finished them off??? Obviously, this movie relied solely on the violence and revenge angle for entertainment, so why didn't they have some contestants refuse to fight so we could see their family members being killed or tortured? Why didn't the writers have Sabrina kill all the guests at the end? Why didn't the guests flee when they saw the 2 guards being killed? Why did Sabrina throw her guns away while, once again, turning her back. I guess the writers were stunt men because they "wrote what they know" leaving out plot and even logic from the movie. Rachel Nickels' salary must have taken up 90% of the budget. Know why she got killed off at the beginning? Because she begged the director to get her out of this movie as fast as possible. And what's the big deal about Zoe Bell? Wow, she's a stunt woman but they didn't have her doing anything special in this movie, no ingenious kills or fantastic Olympian moves, she's surely not eye candy except for her silicone work. I would have given another star if there had been some clothes being torn off or someone had expertly executed some t***y twisters. What a horrible predictable movie except the one pleasant exception when Zoe got killed at the end, which I cheered. And finally, the movie broke one of my rules for movies - there must be at least one likable character. I didn't cover all my pet peeves about the movie because life is too short to spend too much time on a time waster. If you must must watch this movie, watch the beginning set-up then skip to the last 10 minutes, you won't have missing anything.
View MoreGender twist on a familiar plot. Women are abducted and forced to fight each other to the death for the amusement of rich people. Rachel Nichols gets the Janet Leigh treatment, introduced as if she were the star but killed off very early. The real star is Zoë Bell, who's reunited with her Deathproof costars Tracie Thoms and Rosario Dawson (the latter of which is supposed to be a surprise but IMDb's trivia section spoiled it for me). Bell, for those who don't know, is an accomplished stuntwoman who's done surprisingly well when given acting jobs up until now. Here, however, I'll just say that as an actress Zoë makes a great stuntwoman. When it comes to squinting her way through action scenes, she's a regular Clint Eastwood. The rest of the time she's pretty weak. Rebecca Marshall chews scenery as the fighter who likes killing. Doug Jones and Sherilyn Fenn are the bad guys but they're sadly given little to work with. The fight scenes are brutal and bloody. I won't compliment them for their choreography as they aren't staged to be dramatic but to be realistic. How is that entertaining? I'll take Lionheart over this nauseating mess. Depressing ending is the cherry on top of the crap sundae.
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