A fallen MMA fighter must win a netherworld no-holds-barred death tournament against man, beast and demon to save her soul.A fallen MMA fighter must win a netherworld no-holds-barred death tournament against man, beast and demon to save her soul.A fallen MMA fighter must win a netherworld no-holds-barred death tournament against man, beast and demon to save her soul.
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This film takes me back to the days of eating junk food on Saturday afternoons with my dad and watching Chuck Norris do roundhouse kicks. But with Hellkat, Sarah T. Cohen just did a round house to my heart. The film is a cerebral suspense thriller with plenty of MMA action to keep your testosterone levels high.
Like I said, it has a throwback vibe to early 90's martial arts action films and had a few twists and turns that caught me by surprise. The soundtrack is killer (composed by 20Six Hundred)!
Like I said, it has a throwback vibe to early 90's martial arts action films and had a few twists and turns that caught me by surprise. The soundtrack is killer (composed by 20Six Hundred)!
Don't talk about fight club. I certainly won't be talking to anybody about this thing. Is it Mortal Kombat merged with Fight Club and hosted by Vince McMahon, close, but no cigar(ette). I found myself attracted to Sarah T. Cohen and at the same time not. Acting was below average as was the fight scenes. It seems most of the budget went on the soundtrack by 20Six Hundred, which basically sounded like some downloaded loops that had been put together, probably worked the first time it was used, after that... Recommend this if you struggle to fall asleep.
As a major fan of dark, gritty stories, Hellkat delivered on just that. This movie took me back to when I first watched the Mortal Kombat movie from 1995, with it's compelling villain (the tournament host) and it's simple, but engaging plot.
Hellkat doesn't rely on a gore gimmick like a lot of lower budget movies I've seen. It has substance; I loved the satire on evangelicalism. Instead of the hell setting being portayed as an inferno, it's more grounded and subtle.
I HIGHLY recommend checking this out if you're looking for an over-the-top martial arts movie. Despite it's serious moments, you can have a lot of fun watching Hellkat.
Hellkat doesn't rely on a gore gimmick like a lot of lower budget movies I've seen. It has substance; I loved the satire on evangelicalism. Instead of the hell setting being portayed as an inferno, it's more grounded and subtle.
I HIGHLY recommend checking this out if you're looking for an over-the-top martial arts movie. Despite it's serious moments, you can have a lot of fun watching Hellkat.
After losing too many fights, a disgraced former MMA fighter is forced to take any odd job she can to get by, and when one of her patrons one day brings an opportunity to redeem herself in the ring she takes it on, unaware of the demonic implications in store for her and must try to fight her way free.
This one wasn't too bad but did have some issues. When this one stumbles slightly is in the rather underwhelming and stilted means of introducing the general plotline of the film as there's a lot of time that goes by without much of anything happening to get to know who she is or what's going on. Dropped into everything without much in the way of backstory about her career or hard-knock life quickly enough which makes for a somewhat confusing start, especially for the various subplots going on throughout here. As well, the finale is a bit of a mess with the abrupt nature and overall suddenness of the change creates a rather jarring effect that isn't all too effective which are really the films' lone issues. Still, this quibble aside, the film manages far more to like elsewhere. The rest of the setup, focusing on her redemption and general rise from despair to make something of herself once again is a rather strongly accomplished aspect here. The fact that the boredom at the lack of action compensates for everything by giving us a wholly impressive set up as to what she's setting out to accomplish, with the backstory involving her son and how she lost him to the self-destructive antics she took out on herself providing plenty of motivation to get us onto her side and understand what's going on. That it takes place in the guise of a martial arts tournament against a series of demons and various other monsters manages to tie everything together rather nicely. As well, the series of action and brawling that takes place here is a lot of fun and quite enjoyable. More of a series of quick-burst fights exploiting the supernatural powers and antics of their captors against the fighters, the choreography still manages enough to like in terms of the brutality dished out as even though it's not nearly as graphic as it could've been the carnage is quite impressive and gets better as the film carries on. As well, the brutality in the locker room depicting the various restoration treatments to repair the damage of the fights clever means is a lot of fun, and with the generally enjoyable make-up work on the creature designs which is all enough to hold this one up overall.
Rated R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
This one wasn't too bad but did have some issues. When this one stumbles slightly is in the rather underwhelming and stilted means of introducing the general plotline of the film as there's a lot of time that goes by without much of anything happening to get to know who she is or what's going on. Dropped into everything without much in the way of backstory about her career or hard-knock life quickly enough which makes for a somewhat confusing start, especially for the various subplots going on throughout here. As well, the finale is a bit of a mess with the abrupt nature and overall suddenness of the change creates a rather jarring effect that isn't all too effective which are really the films' lone issues. Still, this quibble aside, the film manages far more to like elsewhere. The rest of the setup, focusing on her redemption and general rise from despair to make something of herself once again is a rather strongly accomplished aspect here. The fact that the boredom at the lack of action compensates for everything by giving us a wholly impressive set up as to what she's setting out to accomplish, with the backstory involving her son and how she lost him to the self-destructive antics she took out on herself providing plenty of motivation to get us onto her side and understand what's going on. That it takes place in the guise of a martial arts tournament against a series of demons and various other monsters manages to tie everything together rather nicely. As well, the series of action and brawling that takes place here is a lot of fun and quite enjoyable. More of a series of quick-burst fights exploiting the supernatural powers and antics of their captors against the fighters, the choreography still manages enough to like in terms of the brutality dished out as even though it's not nearly as graphic as it could've been the carnage is quite impressive and gets better as the film carries on. As well, the brutality in the locker room depicting the various restoration treatments to repair the damage of the fights clever means is a lot of fun, and with the generally enjoyable make-up work on the creature designs which is all enough to hold this one up overall.
Rated R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
While the start had some questionable scene and continuity, it was quickly redeemed by the performance of the actors with the limited resources they clearly had, I wasn't expecting an A list film, but I was pleasantly surprised by the grit and effort put in by the cast.
- How long is HellKat?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 18m(78 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
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