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Christy

What does it take to become a legend?
2025 | 135m | English

(11892 votes)

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Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

Christy Martin never imagined life beyond her small-town roots in West Virginia—until she discovered a knack for punching people. Fueled by grit, raw determination, and an unshakable desire to win, she charges into the world of boxing under the guidance of her trainer and manager-turned-husband, Jim. But while Christy flaunts a fiery persona in the ring, her toughest battles unfold outside it—confronting family, identity, and a relationship that just might become life-or-death.
Release Date: Nov 06, 2025
Director: David Michôd
Writer: David Michôd, Katherine Fugate, Mirrah Foulkes
Genres: History
Keywords attempted murder, west virginia, based on true story, domestic violence, female boxing, boxing, 1990s, sports drama, assertive, empathetic, based on real person, biographical drama, 90s
Production Companies Anonymous Content, Black Bear Pictures, Votiv Films, Yoki, Fifty-Fifty Films
Box Office Revenue: $1,310,888
Budget: $15,000,000
Updates Updated: Jan 06, 2026
Entered: Nov 23, 2025
Trailers

Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Sydney Sweeney Christy Martin
Ben Foster James V. Martin
Merritt Wever Joyce Salters
Katy O'Brian Lisa Holewyne
Ethan Embry John Salters
Jess Gabor Rosie
Chad L. Coleman Don King
Tony Cavalero James “Shortdog” Maloney
Miles Mussenden Richard Christmas
Gilbert Cruz Miguel Diaz
James Self Coach
Bill Kelly Larry Carrier
Walter 'Buddy' Carter Walt
Coleman Pedigo Randy Salters
Tamara Hopkins Waitress
Bryan Hibbard Big Jeff
Jay Croft Douglas
Marvin Laviolette Jessie Robinson
Emma Jackson Bonnie
Valyn Hall Dana Jamison
Adrian Lockett Mike Tyson
Stephanie Baur Deirdre Gogarty
Braden Bunch MGM Ring Announcer
Courtney Grace Journalist
Mamie Garard B-Ball Teammate (as Mamie Keith Garard)
John R. Watson Mandalay Bay Announcer (as John Watson)
Carter Shaw Sports Journalist
Naomi Graham Laila Ali
Evit Emerson Weigh In Official
Brandy Renee Brown Hotel Housekeeper
Madison Hobbs Mississippi Ring Commissioner
Ben Aycrigg Rick Cole
Jordan Nelson ER Doctor
Kelly Ann Hoyle ER Nurse
Stephanie Benkovich Nancy
Arischa Conner Orlando Nurse
Myke Holmes Lawyer
Carrie Stauber Judge
Ryan Robertson Bristol Referee
DeeJay Sturdivant Bristol Referee
Anthony Bui Punta Gorda Referee
Joshua Lamboy Daytona Referee
Hank Quillen Referee Fred Steinweinder III
Brian Ashton Smith Mandalay Bay Referee
Matt Baiamonte MGM Referee
Name Job
Ashleigh Chavis Makeup Department Head
Chad Keith Production Design
Matt Villa Editor
Alisa Fredericks First Assistant Director
David Michôd Director, Screenplay
Antony Partos Original Music Composer
Nadia Lorencz Stunts
Megan Deputy Key Makeup Artist
Germain McMicking Director of Photography
Brendalyn Richard Second Assistant Director
Katherine Fugate Story
Mirrah Foulkes Screenplay
Christina Flannery Costume Designer
Jason Hawkins Visual Effects Supervisor
Robert Mackenzie Sound Designer
Ellen Lewis Casting
Kate Sprance Casting
Harrison Huffman Unit Production Manager
Walter Garcia Stunt Coordinator, Fight Choreographer
Sarah Irwin Stunt Double
Bronte Coluccio Stunt Double
Dena Sodano Stunt Double
Michael Jamorski Stunt Double
Meredith Richardson Stunts
Sam Tidwell Stunts
Erika Keck Stunts
Alex Lapeyrolerie Stunts
Julia Utter Stunts
Bridgett Riley Stunts
Michelle Andrea Adams Stunts
Hannah Scott Stunts
Jackie Gerhardy Stunts
April Sutton Stunts
Huxley Rodriguez Production Supervisor
Jonathan Guggenheim Art Direction
Benjamin J. Alexander Art Department Coordinator
Dallas Clarke Thomas Graphic Designer
Owen Pruitt Art Department Assistant
Matt Hobbs Art Department Assistant
Kenneth Neil Moore "A" Camera Operator
Joey Dwyer Steadicam Operator, "B" Camera Operator
Matt Cabinum First Assistant "A" Camera
Monica Barrios-Smith Second Assistant "A" Camera
Jason Lancour First Assistant "B" Camera
Christian Shonts Second Assistant "B" Camera
Jason Johnson Digital Imaging Technician
William Powell Loader
Allie Fredericks Still Photographer
Kevin Strahm Sound Mixer
Levi Carter Boom Operator
Mitchell Haigley Utility Sound
J. Scott Copeland Video Assist Operator
Joel Vazquez Video Assist Operator
Brian Hudson Construction Coordinator
Name Title
Kerry Kohansky-Roberts Producer
Teddy Schwarzman Producer
David Levine Executive Producer
Brent Stiefel Producer
Mirrah Foulkes Executive Producer
Justin Lothrop Producer
John Friedberg Executive Producer
Nick Shumaker Executive Producer
David Michôd Producer
Michael Heimler Executive Producer
Ryan Schwartz Executive Producer
Brad Zimmerman Executive Producer
Andrew Golov Executive Producer
Clementine Quittner Executive Producer
Harrison Huffman Executive Producer
Sydney Sweeney Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 5 3 6 1
2024 6 1 4 0
2024 7 3 7 1
2024 8 2 6 0
2024 9 1 2 1
2024 10 2 4 1
2024 11 1 3 1
2024 12 1 2 1
2025 1 2 4 1
2025 2 1 2 1
2025 3 2 3 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 2 4 0
2025 9 3 5 1
2025 10 3 5 2
2025 11 6 11 4
2025 12 14 28 3
2026 1 9 11 7

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2026 1 369 678
Year Month High Avg
2025 12 4 264
Year Month High Avg
2025 11 144 368

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

Sydney Sweeney delivers quite charismatically here as a young woman coming to terms with her own identity, whilst discovering she has quite a powerful punch. She, Christy Salters, has to keep her relationship with Rosie (Jess Gabor) under wraps from her slightly zealous mother (Merritt Wever) as her ... fighting skills attract the attention of a promoter who sees potential in her no-mercy style of fighting and who sends her to his trainer Jim Martin (Ben Foster). Initially, this man just wants shot of her but gradually learns to appreciate that she has a shot at something bigger. It’s made clear that any fluidity in her sexuality is not going to be tolerated, and with Rosie finding a new man she is soon hooked up with, and married to, Jim. A career under the auspices on the enigmatic Don King (Chad Coleman) now beckons, with all it’s commitment, dedication and dollars - but as she succeeds, we all begin to realise there are cracks a-plenty in her personal life, cocaine starts to play it’s part and the dynamic of her relationship with her husband becomes more oppressive and controlling. Professionally, things are set to come to an head with her famous fight against Laila Ali and personally, how long can this toxic marriage last? The story of this woman’s achievements is certainly worth telling, and I do recall the hype around the Ali fight in 2003, but despite Sweeney’s best efforts I just found this to be an unevenly paced and frankly rather sterile depiction of Martin’s life. It spends far too long on the development phase, skirts over too much of that which makes her personable and drifts all too often into a disappointing melodrama that robs the thing of much of the vitality that this ought to have delivered. Foster looks the part, ok, but again his character is left undercooked and I really struggled to get to grips with why she ever fell for him in the first place, much less married him - especially when he presented her with a pink kit. For a film that is about addiction, in many different forms, it hasn’t any sense of urgency or spark - indeed, I did find myself looking at my watch a couple of times as this 2¼ hours plods along. What action scenes there are are well presented, but there aren’t really enough of them to help this immerse us in the very visceral and conflicted nature of this woman’s life, and in many ways this was just as much a mismatch as many of her early fights. Pity.

Dec 03, 2025
Geronimo1967
6.0

Sydney Sweeney delivers quite charismatically here as a young woman coming to terms with her own identity, whilst discovering she has quite a powerful punch. She, Christy Salters, has to keep her relationship with Rosie (Jess Gabor) under wraps from her slightly zealous mother (Merritt Wever) as her ... fighting skills attract the attention of a promoter who sees potential in her no-mercy style of fighting and who sends her to his trainer Jim Martin (Ben Foster). Initially, this man just wants shot of her but gradually learns to appreciate that she has a shot at something bigger. It’s made clear that any fluidity in her sexuality is not going to be tolerated, and with Rosie finding a new man she is soon hooked up with, and married to, Jim. A career under the auspices on the enigmatic Don King (Chad Coleman) now beckons, with all it’s commitment, dedication and dollars - but as she succeeds, we all begin to realise there are cracks a-plenty in her personal life, cocaine starts to play it’s part and the dynamic of her relationship with her husband becomes more oppressive and controlling. Professionally, things are set to come to an head with her famous fight against Laila Ali and personally, how long can this toxic marriage last? The story of this woman’s achievements is certainly worth telling, and I do recall the hype around the Ali fight in 2003, but despite Sweeney’s best efforts I just found this to be an unevenly paced and frankly rather sterile depiction of Martin’s life. It spends far too long on the development phase, skirts over too much of that which makes her personable and drifts all too often into a disappointing melodrama that robs the thing of much of the vitality that this ought to have delivered. Foster looks the part, ok, but again his character is left undercooked and I really struggled to get to grips with why she ever fell for him in the first place, much less married him - especially when he presented her with a pink kit. For a film that is about addiction, in many different forms, it hasn’t any sense of urgency or spark - indeed, I did find myself looking at my watch a couple of times as this 2¼ hours plods along. What action scenes there are are well presented, but there aren’t really enough of them to help this immerse us in the very visceral and conflicted nature of this woman’s life, and in many ways this was just as much a mismatch as many of her early fights. Pity.

Dec 03, 2025