When a Calgary-based fight trainer named Javier (Van Dien) gets involved in the world of all-female underground Punchfighting, things go bad fast. Russian mobsters believe he owes them money, so they shoot him. His daughter Zoey (Croden) has a career of her own as a more traditional MMA-style fighter in Las Vegas, and her trainer is the by-the-book Uncle Ray (Pardue). After being told what happened to her father, she returns home to Canada to sort out what's going on.
On top of everything else, it turns out Javier was in debt, but not to the gangsters; he is behind on mortgages to both his house and his gym and he was in dire financial trouble. His last employee, a fighter named Renee "The Blade" Hansen (Van Ryck de Groot) is there to console Zoey, but when a shady fight promoter known only as Jones (Munro) enters their lives, things get even more complicated. He wants her to Punchfight, but Renee at first doesn't want her to. But, as you might guess, Zoey wants to enter the underground fight world so she can get to the truth about what happened to her beloved dad.
So she works her way through all the Boxcar Wilhelminas, only to run up against Natalia (McCrea),part of the Russian crime underworld, and a Scottish fight promoter named Feodor (Capaldi). Naturally, even though Uncle Ray disapproves of this more brutal and unregulated fighting style, it all comes to a head in the big, final fight. Will Zoey get to the truth? Or will she be caught in the ultimate CHOKEHOLD?
Here's the most surprising thing about Chokehold: they're still making movies like this in 2019! Don't get us wrong, we're happy about it, especially when it's done well, as it is here. But seeing as it's in the wake of Bloodsport (1988),Bloodfist (1989),Bloodfist II (1990),and, perhaps most aptly, Lady Bloodfight (2016),it's also surprising they didn't decide to call it "Blood Choke", or something like that.
While we didn't approve of the CGI bone-breaks, or some of the stupider bits of dialogue, we thought, overall, that Chokehold is a good example of the age-old Punchfighting story and it has a lot going for it in the win column.
For example, you can see everything that goes on and it's well-lit. That's no small thing in this era of poor lighting. So it gets points for that. Fan favorite Van Dien is great in his role, brief as it is. He looks grizzled (in a macho way, of course) and he isn't just a trainer; he gets in on some fight action as well. But the filmmakers found a way to cleverly intersperse him throughout the film even after he's supposedly "gone". It provided some welcome emotion to it all.
Another thing we hadn't seen before was, during the Punchfighting matches, there were live DJs playing music while the ladies fought it out. Even more impressively, during one of the fights, there was a live metal band playing. This hybrid of music and punching must have been highly entertaining for the enthusiastic patrons in the audience. If you get bored of the fighting, you can rave it up to the techno and dubstep from the DJs. Or if metal is more your speed, you can bang your head. It was pretty novel.
When it comes to Melissa Croden as our heroine, Zoey, it's a classic case of what we talked about when we were recently on the Direct To Video Connoisseur's podcast. Namely, that it's preferable to get a fighter to act than it is to get an actor to fight. Clearly she's a real fighter, which went a long way as far as the beat-em-up scenes are concerned. Her flat affect is almost at Don "The Dragon" Wilson-levels, which was charming. Physically she's reminiscent of Julianne Nicholson and she definitely has a future in DTV if she wants one.
Chokehold does not deviate at all from the formulas of the Punchfighters of yore. There's nothing wrong with that. If anything, its stubbornness in holding fast to the old ways is commendable. Some well-staged fight scenes and B-Movie names add polish to this well-made entry in the underground fighting canon. Fans of the genre (especially of the sub-subgenre of all-female Punchfighting) will want to check it out.
Chokehold
2019
Action / Crime / Drama
Chokehold
2019
Action / Crime / Drama
Plot summary
Zoey, an up and coming mixed martial arts fighter, gives up her dream of fighting in a worldwide mixed martial arts tournament to fight in the seedy, underground world of mixed martial arts fighting after her father is killed by the Russian mob associated with the underground fighting world. She battles a lot of fighters in many different venues to get the ultimate fight, a fight with the people responsible for her father's death.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Some well-staged fight scenes and B-Movie names add polish to this.
Great fighting scenes!
I loved this movie, it was enterntaining from start to finsih.
I liked the great female cast, too - and especially the two ladys wearing their tank-tops and black sports- and boxer-shorts.
Thank you!
Just another generic fight movie...
Of course I sat down to watch the 2019 movie "Chokehold" solely because that Casper Van Dien was on the cast list. So imagine my surprise when I realized just how little he was actually in the movie.
Now, the storyline told in "Chokehold" is pretty straight forward and very easy to follow. It is a simplistic revenge fighting movie that does little to challenge the intellect of the viewers. Yeah, this movie is essentially a movie where you just lean back and watch the ladies duke it out.
And that was essentially all that there was to this movie; women fighting. And that made for a rather mundane and somewhat boring movie experience. Sure, I believe that there is an audience out there for a movie such as "Chokehold". I, however, wanted a movie with a bit more contents to it than what writers Brian Skiba and Craig Michael Hall delivered with this 2019 movie.
The acting in the movie was dubious at best. So you shouldn't sit down to watch "Chokehold" and expect to see a myriad of spectacular acting performances. The majority of performances were actually wooden and rigid. But I suppose that had a lot to do with the fact that the characters in the movie were bland, pointless and mediocre.
Yeah, the writing wasn't the biggest force of this movie, neither in terms of script and story, nor in terms of characters with depths and appeal.
"Chokehold" is the type of movie that came and went without leaving a lasting impression in any way. I didn't even know about it before now in 2021, as I had the opportunity to sit down to watch it. And I know that this is not a movie that will find its way to my TV a second time around.
My rating of "Chokehold" lands on a less than mediocre four out of ten stars. And that is based mostly on the fighting sequences alone, as the movie offered little else actually.