Chaos depicts assassins hosting a lethal tournament luring aspiring models. A vengeful woman threatens them as they turn on each other in this blood-soaked nightmare inspired by true events,... Read allChaos depicts assassins hosting a lethal tournament luring aspiring models. A vengeful woman threatens them as they turn on each other in this blood-soaked nightmare inspired by true events, cautioning about dangers in freelance modeling.Chaos depicts assassins hosting a lethal tournament luring aspiring models. A vengeful woman threatens them as they turn on each other in this blood-soaked nightmare inspired by true events, cautioning about dangers in freelance modeling.
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Featured reviews
Not a movie, not a feature, not worth your time.
For you nine year olds out there, here lies 2 hours of trashy "fight girl" promo shots that have been stitched into ... what? A movie? What's clear from this mess is the narrowly-focused entrepreneur Kelcey Coe (whose name appears about 20 times during the 40-minute credit roll) has taken his collection of cheaply captured Emo role-play fantasy footage and regurgitated it into as many mediums as possible to make a buck. Magazines, websites, videos, apparel, and yes, this thing.
If watching a long series of amateur teen girls mug at the camera while holding chains and dripping fake blood sounds like something you'd like to see, drink your fill. Just know it's hard not to make that sound titillating ... it's not. There's no acting, no story, no direction, no premise, and no purpose. It's an unhealthy look into Coe's personal fantasy world, which also hosts his alternate persona Russell Brown, the world's deadliest assassin.
For you nine year olds out there, here lies 2 hours of trashy "fight girl" promo shots that have been stitched into ... what? A movie? What's clear from this mess is the narrowly-focused entrepreneur Kelcey Coe (whose name appears about 20 times during the 40-minute credit roll) has taken his collection of cheaply captured Emo role-play fantasy footage and regurgitated it into as many mediums as possible to make a buck. Magazines, websites, videos, apparel, and yes, this thing.
If watching a long series of amateur teen girls mug at the camera while holding chains and dripping fake blood sounds like something you'd like to see, drink your fill. Just know it's hard not to make that sound titillating ... it's not. There's no acting, no story, no direction, no premise, and no purpose. It's an unhealthy look into Coe's personal fantasy world, which also hosts his alternate persona Russell Brown, the world's deadliest assassin.
What is there not to like about this film? it had everything you would expect in a brutal, no holds barred girls fight tournament. Interesting characters, love the grind-house style sleaze and the violence in this. Watch it! It's a stylistic film for sure.
Did you know
- TriviaFrom January to April 2019 several models and actresses on Instagram were contacted to be a part of the "GIRLFIGHT: MODEL KOMBAT CREDIT GIRL PROGRAM," where models submitted selfies to be included at the end of the credits. Aside from selfies, several women got creative and submitted video footage filmed by cameramen and were automatically granted "cast member" status, where they receive credit in the cast section and in the credit block of all the books, magazines, Web site, Blu-rays, DVDs, and 27x40 posters.
- GoofsIn several instances during the tournament, several behind the scenes props are seen. This ranges from blood bottles to cars, neighboring houses, casual clothing, and a table of props.
- Crazy creditsThe film continues briefly into the credits when Raven of L.A. introduces the "credit girl" sequence and thanks Raven of Cleveland for killing Russell Brown.
- Alternate versionsThere are two main cuts of the film: the Theatrical Cut and the Extended Cut. The Extended Cut removes minor scenes but adds many more girls and extends the films scenes. The Theatrical Cut has an Unrated Cut which removes all the banners from the topless women.
- ConnectionsEdited from GirlFight: inVite (2016)
- SoundtracksRaven & Moonlight Theme
Mixed by Kelcey Coe
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $30,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 5h 54m(354 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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