
Jack Severino has no memory, all he knows is the brutal sport of Pit Fighting. When his past catches him up, he realizes he is not who he thought he was. For some men must fight for redemption.... (Full plot summary below)
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Jack Severino has no memory, all he knows is the brutal sport of Pit Fighting. When his past catches him up, he realizes he is not who he thought he was. For some men must fight for redemption.
Leave your thoughts about Pit Fighter.
| Movie MetropolisJohn J. PuccioPit Fighter aspires to very little but accomplishes its limited goals in rare style. |
| DVDTalk.comScott WeinbergA sports-style kick-fest that instantly morphs into a machine-gun parade that would have John Rambo drooling in envy. |
| User ReviewDavid SUtterly brutal, no budget whatsoever, but mesmerising fights!!! Dominiquie Vandenberg is an outstanding battler. |
| User ReviewLeo MHE KICKS AN EYE OUT. HE KICKS SOMEONE'S EYE OUT. ENOUGH SAID. OK, I suppose I owe you more than that. The Pit Fighter somehow manages an immersive premise (although admittedly, some plot points are questionable) and the fight scenes are satisfyingly gritty. Of course, there are some bad moments - certain characters will grind on you, dialogue was never going to be this film's strong point, and the story behind "Marianne" left me very unfulfilled. However, this film houses one of the most brilliantly OTT Action scenes I've ever seen (the ending btw) and HE KICKS SOMEONE'S EYE OUT. Just KICK and Bye Beye! |
| User ReviewVincent OShot on a no-budget of just 600,000, this when all considered is not half bad. I usually detest movies shot on video but the acting, action and the essential fight scenes are nicely executed. The relentless, graphic violence on screen is pretty gripping if this is what you like (the title is self explanatory) and the main actor used to be a real kick boxer, which gives it a little bit of authenticity. Many higher productions lose this gritty reality for being too highly polished. |
| User ReviewJane VI honestly don't know where to start with this one. It took me two tries to get through it, as the first 20 minutes nearly put me to sleep (on second thought, maybe I should watch these so late at night...). Whatever, in any case the filmmakers seemed to have a few things they wanted to say with PIT FIGHTER, but much of the "message" (if one can call it that) is blunted by not really explaining anything and massive imbalance in the narrative threads that would have fleshed out exactly what we were supposed to divine from this poorly edited mess of an action film. It's also bookended by a couple of Bible quotes that have something to do with the scenes they immediately precede/follow, but little else (in my estimation). The basic plot is that a mysterious man who nearly died in a shootout and has memory loss gets taken under the wing of a low level criminal in the Mexican mafia (Steven Bauer, SCARFACE). He discovers/remembers a talent for fighting, and so he starts participating in underground kickboxing matches for money. All the while he has memories of a woman he loved and thought dead, but things change when he sees her one night after a fight. As messy and cheap as the film is, it's not all for nothing. There is a decent amount of kickboxing action, and brutal action at that. There was one scene with a guy's eyeball hanging out of his skull, which was kind of cool. I also thought that the overall pacing of the fight sequences was adequate so that the overly ponderous narrative never got too much to take. The best action scene is probably the final shootout between the titular "fighter" and what I'm guessing was the Mexican mafia. You get to see him mow through all of these guys, often using their own weapons against them, and then resorting to a sword that he brought with him. The gunplay and sword-fighting was a nice changeup from the brawling that came before it. Where the film misses is about everywhere else. They tried to make the main character, Jack (as we learn late into the film), into some religious nut. He allows opponents to "show off" by beating him up before knocking them out. He donates his winnings to a local priest (from Ireland? The ethnic makeup of the cast was head-scratching at times. Was everyone except the mafia an immigrant or living there temporarily?). He also has visions of the Virgin Mary that aren't explained (except kind of at the end where the actual person he's been seeing is named). It was all rather weird, and the last minute revelations/memories he has about his forgotten past smacked of narrative convenience, i.e., to add an extra wrinkle to the final conflict. Another issue is the major subplot regarding Jack's girlfriend(?) Marianne, who turns out to be some university professor-turned-revolutionary stealing from the mafia in order to fund antigovernment rebels (or something like that). The story of an amnesiac who remembers his past and then confronts it would have been sufficient, in my opinion. But, I guess the filmmakers thought since it was set in a Central American country they might as well throw in some half-baked subplot about the very real political and social turmoil in the region...without any nuance, of course. As for the other elements, the acting was generally poor. The best actor was Steven Bauer (of SCARFACE fame), but even it seemed like he was phoning it in. The oddest of the cast had to have been the "doctor" who patches Jack up at the beginning. He had these weird mannerisms and speech pattern that was really off-putting. It also didn't help that his dialogue didn't seem based in reality (I know the filmmakers weren't medical experts, but come on, they could have researched a little bit). The cinematography was decent for a low-budget movie, with the occasional shot that looked like it could be part of a TV documentary, but the washed-out look was kind of depressing and just emphasized how cheap-looking everything was. Camera-work was OK, I guess, but nothing special. Overall, I would say that only those with the lowest of standards would possibly get any enjoyment out of this. It had the potential to be laughably bad, but the tone and look would make it hard to have fun with a drinking game, were someone inclined to make one out of this. Basically, this wasn't worth my time and it probably won't be worth yours either. |
| User ReviewCarl MLow budget B movie with a lot of blood and violence, it's not actually quite as awful as you might expect. The fight scenes are unimpressive, so much so that this cannot seriously be considered a martial arts movie. Likewise the final shoot out is badly executed, with people seemingly unable to shoot straight. |
| User ReviewPhilip Ghorrible film. the film had the cinematography, acting, and plot line of a soap opera. the only up side to the movie was the fight scenes, and even they were sub par. unless you have seen every other fighting movie on the planet, and are extremely bored, do not watch this movie. P.S. (spoiler alert) there was literally a point in the movie where he stands in the middle of 50-100 guys with machine guns, who are about 5-10 feet away, and somehow they never hit him with a bullet... i haven't seen such bad aim since star wars. |
| User ReviewEsa EOne of those "so bad it's good" movies for me. Everyone's so serious you wonder if they meant to make a bad movie, or were they seriously that oblivious. I'll be watching this again and again. |