Netflix series explores women's dreams in the body-slamming world of
Japanese pro wrestling
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[October 08, 2024]
By YURI KAGEYAMA
TOKYO (AP) — “The Queen of Villains” is a typical coming-of-age tale
about a young woman’s road to empowerment and self-discovery — except it
all takes place in the body-slamming, arm-twisting world of Japanese
professional wrestling.
The Netflix series, which began airing last month, tells the story of
Dump Matsumoto, a real-life wrestling legend from the 1980s who grew up
poor with a father who was often absent or abusive.
Matsumoto grew up angry, she said, and went on to create in her
wrestling persona a ferocious, almost camp villain character, known in
the sport as a “heel,” complete with outlandish Kabuki-like facial
makeup, chains, sticks and a grotesque scowl. She loomed large as a
symbol of fearless and defiant womanhood.
“I gave it my all to be evil,” Matsumoto said.
A hefty woman with a friendly smile, Matsumoto makes a point even now to
adamantly deny that she was ever a nice person or acknowledge that many
people in Japan, especially women, love her.
“I still beat people up in matches. I stuck forks in them and made them
bleed,” she said, adding, “All the people who pretend to be good are the
truly evil ones.”
“The Queen of Villains” follows the friendship between Matsumoto and
Chigusa Nagayo of the popular wrestling tag team known as the Crush
Gals. Nagayo served as an adviser, trainer and choreographer for the
series’ dramatized wrestling scenes.
Japanese professional wrestling fans still talk about the matches
between Matsumoto and the Crush Gals, including the ones they fought in
the U.S.
The actresses in the series spent two years training for their roles.
They gained weight and muscle, and learned techniques like the “giant
swing,” in which a wrestler grabs her opponent’s legs and moves in a
dizzying circle, or the “flying knee kick,” which involves a jump and
kick to the body while airborne.
The trick in professional wrestling is to execute the punches and body
slams convincingly but in a controlled way to avoid serious injuries. A
wrestler also must know how to fall properly.
One key fight scene took a month to film as the actors went over each
move, again and again.
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This image released by Netflix Series The Queen of Villains shows
Yuriyan Retriever, front, and Erika Karata in a scene from the film
"The Queen of Villains." (Netflix Series The Queen of Villains via
AP)
“Dump played a role to be hated by
the entire nation,” said Yuriyan Retriever, a professional comedian
who stars as Matsumoto in the series.
“Previously, there was a limit, maybe even unintentionally, beyond
which I couldn’t go. But when I played Dump, all those emotions had
to come out and be expressed,” she said.
She felt like she was no longer playing a role, she said, but that
she had become Dump Matsumoto.
“It’s frightening to be hated, and I don’t think anyone wants to be
hated,” Retriever said.
“When I finished a cut, I was crying. And my body was shaking. I
can’t express it in words, but I understood all the pressures Dump
must have felt.”
The series not only presents a women-beating-the-odds story against
a backdrop of sexism and abusive management but it also captures the
postwar period of the Showa-era in a way that feels authentic. The
scenes used thousands of extras, many of them serious wrestling
fans.
Some viewers say the real-life wrestling was more intense than the
dramatized version in the new series.
Rionne McAvoy, an Australian filmmaker who as a professional
wrestler was hit with a stick by Matsumoto, said: “The actors often
fail to capture the intensity, grit and charisma required for these
roles."
But for most viewers, it’s real enough and heartbreaking.
“This is an eternal but emotional story portraying ordinary girls
who passionately pursued a dream, found friendship and also
themselves,” director Kazuya Shiraishi said.
“It gave me a chance to reflect on my own 15-year filmmaking career,
what I truly want to be, what kind of films I want to make. I just
wanted to tell their story, which is also everyone’s story.”
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