A ballet troupe stranded in a remote Hungarian inn finds themselves fighting gangsters in 2026's Pretty Lethal. You'd think after the recent John Wick spin-off, Ballerina, there'd be some moratorium on ballet martial arts movies but no. In truth, this is a better film than Ballerina but none of these movies have really attained that holy grail of truly blending ballet and martial arts in a visually convincing way. What this film does get right is the relationship dynamics between women and girls, which I don't think is impossible for a man to write convincingly but the fact that this film was written and directed by women probably gave it a leg up.
This is also the second 2026 movie about girls kicking ass in a labyrinthine hotel I've watched in as many days. It seems to be the year for it. I am a sucker for movies in which people get stuck in big houses or hotels.
When their bus breaks down in the woods on their way to a big show in Budapest, the troupe is forced to walk through the wilderness before they miraculously stumble across the enormous inn. Inside, the dim, coloured lighting, casino atmosphere, and anachronistically 1920s gilded decor recall the John Wick movies. The girls reluctantly relax while their manager, Thorna (Lydia Leonard), tries to arrange some transport into town. Meanwhile, the girls meet the sinister owner of the place, Devora Kasimer, played by Uma Thurman, who's certainly believable as a former ballerina, as she turns out to be. Unfortunately, she's also a ruthless mob boss.
The girls are Zoe (Iris Apatow), Princess (Lana Condor), Chloe (Millicent Simmonds), Grace (Avantika), and Bones (Maddie Ziegler). The movie's strongest point is that by the end of the film you're acquainted with each girl's distinct personality, how she functions within the group dynamic, and you're concerned for all of them. Bones shapes up to be the leader because she's established as practical and already given to physical confrontation. Grace is an ultra-religious ditz who's darkly amusing after one of the gangsters drugs her. But her funniest line is near the end of the film when one of the other girls spots some explosives and says, "C4?!" and Grace says, "I see at least sixteen!" Someone should've said, "Say 'goodnight', Gracie."
But my favourite character, by far, was Princess, despite the fact that actress Lana Condor clearly does not have the physique for a professional ballerina. Not that I don't like her physique, I particularly enjoyed watching her run. But ballerinas tend towards the more slender. But while it never really seems credible that the girls can physically overpower their captors, Princess does have a brilliant moment where she talks her way out of trouble using nonsense and misdirection, randomly babbling to a gangster she runs into about the WiFi and a reality show she watches as a guilty pleasure. There are some viewers who might find use of such feminine wiles to be implausible but I suspect such viewers would be precisely the sorts of people who've fallen prey to such wiles more than once.
So the screenplay has the goods, the director is competent, and the cast are great. The crucial flaw in this film is the fight choreography. It's that choreography that has to bear the weight of so much of the film's essential premise, the idea that ballet is so much like a martial art already that a group of ballerinas can just improvise a fighting style from it to fend off a number of experienced killers. Too much of the film's choreography relies on the audience being used to artificial movie fighting styles which employ a lot more spinning than true martial arts tend to do. I suspect the rise in popularity of MMA fighting has made the average viewer too savvy for that now. It's just awkward and sometimes even silly watching these girls succeed in a fight by suddenly going en pointe or adopting some other elegant pose. What they ought to have done is contemplated the famous hallway fight scene in Oldboy. In that scene, the fight is exciting not because the protagonist exhibits astonishing skill, but because he's actually quite sloppy and unpolished and succeeds more by tenacity than by his years of solitary training. I do believe these girls have strong legs so I think some good choreography could have been worked out to make it credible that they manage to gain an upper hand despite a lot of messy setbacks.
It's certainly worth watching the movie for the characters at least. Pretty Lethal is available on Amazon Prime.