Right to Fight (2023)
27KRight to Fight (2023). 1h 30m
“The women featured in this remarkable documentary werenu0026#39;t extended much of a welcome by the boxing industry and found their careers cut short for a variety of reasons. In some cases before they barely got started. If it wasnu0026#39;t bad enough that they were battling the fight gameu0026#39;s powers-that-be, the women were even betrayed and conspired against by those who were supposed to be looking out for their best interests. But they waged battles in their time, both within and beyond the ring, that benefited future generations and eventually made womenu0026#39;s boxing what it is today.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eHowever, to them it was always about more than just boxing. Their goal in part was to prove that the American Dream was attainable to women as much as it was to the patriarchy that wrote the rulebook they were being forced to play by. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness often carry a heavy cost that comes payable, ironically enough, to those whose will it is to crush the very aspirations some endure great hardships chasing after.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eRight To Fightu0026#39;s writer/director Georgina Cammalleri is unsparing in taking inventory of such reality checks. These freedom fighters chose not to conform to societyu0026#39;s expectations so that they could push back against nasty stereotypes and existential obsolescence. As a result, they were restricted in their time to measuring success not by financial gain and title belts but by the number of closed doors they were able to smash off their hinges, no matter how extraordinary the risk or resistance.”