Raze

Some may consider this to be problematic, even anti-feminist, but the truth is there’s something distinctively exciting about a so-called girl fight. Consider Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill films and how completely different the story would have been had the protagonist been male; part of the excitement comes from what’s at stake and it often involves children. For where there are women fighting, there are often mothers (or potential mothers) fighting for their children; this invites a whole new level of emotion and violence and complicates what might be a slightly more straightforward story of survival or revenge. Raze is director Josh C. Waller’s debut feature film, and he capitalizes on all of the excitement inspired by bloody fights to the death set in a world where hell hath no fury like a woman kidnapped and forced to fight for her survival.
Zoë Bell plays Sabrina, the femme fatale in Raze, and much of the film depends on the performance of this stuntwoman turned actor. Bell was Thurman’s stunt double in Kill Bill 1 and Kill Bill 2, and started out as Lucy Lawless’s stunt double on Xena: Warrior Princess. Bell’s work on the sets of these productions has clearly paid off, as she delivers a strong performance, fighting like a bare-knuckled gladiator against women in a brick pit. The captured women in the film do not know their captors or why they have been chosen, but the lives of their loved ones are at stake, so each day they fight to the death. Although Bell is the standout actor in Raze, Tracie Thoms and Rebecca Marshall also deliver memorable performances in the fight scenes and in the confines of their cells where each prisoner plots a way out, or the next kill.