The Queen of Villains

極悪女王 ‧ Drama ‧ 2024
Completed
Prof_Kim-Kang
1 people found this review helpful
12 days ago
5 of 5 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 7.0

'The Story of Women Who Fight' — Powerful, Emotional, and Criminally Underrated


Every once in a while, on a whim, I choose to watch a low-rated series. Normally, ratings, reviews, and audience comments are what determine whether I'll give a show a chance. But once in a blue moon, that spontaneous decision leads me to something I can only describe as a hidden gem—a true masterpiece.

This was one of those rare occasions.

I randomly decided to watch it simply because I wanted to see a series starring actors chosen for their talent rather than just their looks, and because it was only five episodes long. What I didn't expect was to stumble upon one of the finest adaptations of real events I have ever seen. Even more astonishing was discovering that most of the story is actually true.

The series chronicles the golden era of Japanese women's professional wrestling in the 1980s—a phenomenon whose popularity, cultural impact, and sheer intensity genuinely felt like uncovering a forgotten revolution in history. As someone deeply interested in history, it's incredibly rare for me to come across an entire cultural movement that I knew almost nothing about.

I won't go into the plot or story details to avoid spoilers (the synopsis already does a good job of setting things up). Instead, I'll focus on why I loved this series so much. For context, anything I rate between **9 and 10** belongs to my personal S-tier, and this comfortably earns its place there.

What impressed me the most was how effortlessly the series made me feel exactly what the creators intended—without ever feeling manipulative. That's something many shows, especially some K-dramas, struggle with. Too often, emotional moments rely on artificially shocking twists that you understand are necessary from a storytelling perspective, but rarely *feel* organically earned.

This series was different.

The excitement, joy, heartbreak, tension, and shock all emerged naturally as the events unfolded. Knowing that these moments were rooted in real history elevated the entire experience to another level. Yes, the series takes a few creative liberties here and there, but with the real personalities involved in the production, it never loses sight of the truth at the heart of the story.

The performances deserve immense praise. Every actor delivers a phenomenal performance, and the character development is equally exceptional. I could genuinely feel the gradual evolution of each character, and every transformation felt emotionally and logically justified—something many storytellers fail to achieve.

The editing is another major strength. Not once did my attention drift away from the screen. That's saying a lot because I've found myself struggling to stay engaged with many highly acclaimed series lately. Here, every scene served a purpose, and the pacing remained consistently gripping throughout.

Of course, there are a few things I personally might have done differently. I would have included a handful of additional real-life incidents to provide greater historical context, and perhaps explored some more personal moments that could have made the emotional highs hit even harder. But honestly, those are incredibly minor nitpicks. Who am I to question the decisions of creators who crafted such an outstanding piece of storytelling?

In the end, I'll simply say this: the chances of you being disappointed by this series are incredibly slim. The only real exception would be if you find graphic violence difficult to watch. Some wrestling scenes are fairly explicit, featuring bloodshed and brutal injuries. I suspect that's one reason why the show has received lower ratings from some viewers. But after watching footage of the actual matches, I realised the series wasn't exaggerating for dramatic effect—it was staying remarkably faithful to reality. In fact, portraying that brutality honestly was essential to understanding the physical and emotional sacrifices these wrestlers made. Sanitising those moments would have not only weakened the story but also would have taken important parts of it away.

Sometimes the best stories aren't the ones everyone is talking about—they're the ones you discover by accident. And for me, this was one of those unforgettable discoveries.

P.S. - Best Way to enjoy the series - Just go for it without any overthinking or research into the story, and once you have seen it, read this article ,if you enjoy reading the real stories behind the inspired stories -

https://prowrestlingstories.com/pro-wrestling-stories/dump-matsumoto-vs-the-crush-gals-ajw-japan-feud/

and then watch this original fight (which you will enjoy if you watched WWF/WWE as a kid) -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOc2S04YiC0&t=196s

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Completed
Karinanose
0 people found this review helpful
May 22, 2025
5 of 5 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Wrestling is real

As someone who watches both wrestling and jdramas, I feel I'm uniquely suited to review this one.

My knowledge of Joshi(female) wrestling isn't the greatest as I mainly watched north american wrestling growing up. I dabbled in bits and pieces of Joshi wrestling as in the last few years. As such, I found this dramatization to be an instant showstopper for people who want to get further into the Joshi scene.

The story of this drama revolves around redemption, self worth, growing pains, family trauma, sexism and feminism. I thought they handled the subjects with care. There were times were I was moved to tears to what I was witnessing. This may not happen to everyone, but I found that the show had a visceral feeling of self loathing and weakness. Many people do not understand the toll wrestling takes on people over the years and how much effort goes into maintaining their status.I found that this put a spotlight on the fears and trauma wrestlers face. In the older days and even still now, women's wrestling was seen as second rate and not worth watching over men's. The women constantly had to prove themselves in a sport run by men. The trials wrestlers face such as changing crowd sentiment, physical abuse from senior wrestlers, unrecognized skill and bodily damage are all in focus in this series.

These feelings of worthlessness are perfectly performed by Yuriyan Retriever and her younger self(couldn't seem to find name of actor). I was thoroughly impressed with how much humanity was portrayed by them. From fleeting moments of watching wrestling for the first time to witnessing someone else rise above you. The highs were extra strong and the lows crushing. I felt strongly about everyone's battles in this show. I feel it will resonate with anyone who was ever told they were physically ugly or would not amount to anything. Kaoru's journey from someone undesirable to someone undeniable was a beautiful thing.In a way the show is extremely uplifting in that everyone rises to the occasion to overcome their weaknesses. The backstory of Kaoru and her family really helped push the motivations for her strength. Likewise the glow she observes from fellow wrestlers shining light were very inspirational. It's the job of the pro wrestler to get you invested into that story and they did a hell of a job in this. The standout performances of grit during the wrestling scenes were impeccable.

Speaking of which, I went back and watched a few real life versions of these matches and read about how they trained for this movie. Watching the matches in comparison it's extremely impressive how they mimicked the matches. In wrestling we call real life things "shoots" and fake things "kayfabe." This movie blurs the lines of what was kayfabe and what was a shoot. Japanese pro wrestling is much more "stiff" meaning the hits are usually actually real. Especially in the older days they really went all out to the point of exhaustion. You see this a lot in this movie. So if you are skirmish of violent acts with blood, you may want to pace yourself. The ring cinematography captures the electric feeling of the wrestling world so well. From the audience to the refs, to the ring announcers being hilariously calm while chaos is happening all around them. This is definitely a love letter to the spectacle of wrestling. The dynamic shooting angles and the triumphant musical choruses really give the pacing of these matches a special quality. Wrestlers have this innate ability to draw people in with the simplest of things. An eye look there, a brisk evasion, a strong slam down.. Wrestling is truly an art form in motion.

During some scenes it's hard to understand whether or not things were predetermined to happen or if it really did happen like that. That is something that for years has blurred in the wrestling world. Nowadays we hear a lot about the back end of things and some of that magic is lost. They explore this in the film when we see the owners and bookers(people who work out the match scenarios) discuss how they want the next showing to work. They touch a bit on when things happen like when Jaguar does a german suplex that signals the end of the match. Some wrestlers will audibly call out moves in ring on the fly, while others well choreograph every single moment. I found this series leaned more into the realism aspect in that regard. They didn't really have to talk about it however as the fights felt more gripping. This is truly a more of keeping kayfabe alive.

A small thing I want to touch on is the excellent set and costume design. I heard that they used Stardom's training ring for this series and was squealing with joy. Many of the show's set design were impressive with the hundreds of posters, fans shirts, bandannas and everything were amazingly done. The outfits were also so extravagantly 80s. The bright neons and checkered patterns were great touches. I loved every moment of seeing what sort of outfit would show up next. The wrestling attire was also lovingly recreated and was great comparing them to the originals. The hairstyles were also gorgeous representations of 80's styles. All the actors go through various stages in their life in this and it was really great seeing the progressive hairstyling.

I also really enjoyed how Lioness Asuka and Nagayo were heavily focused on to round out the feeling of this show. I found the three very different perspectives to be a strong core story. The heavy handed nature of wrestling discourse were explored through each one of these ladies. The wrestler who wants to stick to traditional non high flying with no weapon base vs the revolutionary who brings in things that feel foreign to wrestling vs the heel(someone playing the bad guy) who's job it is to make people hate them. Each perspective brings nuance to the sport and I greatly applaud their efforts into designing it this way. They do touch a little on about idol crossover culture in Joshi wrestling. Wrestlers have the same obligations as idols do, especially Joshis. Tv appearances, songs, movies, fashion shoots and merch sales were sprinkled in throughout.

I think this series is a fantastic gateway into learning about the harshness of the wrestling world and may even spur you like it did me to check out some old historical matches or current companies now. Whether you watch Stardom or WWE or AEW etc , it does not matter. All wrestling is valid (except backyard wrestling) and that is the beauty of the wrestling world.

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  • Score: 7.5 (scored by 245 users)
  • Ranked: #6918
  • Popularity: #14132
  • Watchers: 607

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