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CATFIGHT: Sociopolitical Black Comedy Draws Black Eyes In The First Trailer

My guess was as good as anyone else’s when I first learned of what would become of award-winning director Onur Tukel’s latest, Catfight. The film then wrapped in late 2015 and premiered at TIFF last year to a resounding reception with notable reviews that garnish the film’s roll out suitably for a release hopefully not too far down the line.

For this, we get actresses Sandra Oh and Anne Heche who are both impeccable performers in their own right with actress Alicia Silverstone, and co-stars Dylan Baker, Tituss Burgess newcomer Ariel Kavoussi. As such and drawing from the conclusions of critics, it appears Tukel’s independent feat is nothing short of a well-rounded and fully balanced comedy that accomplishes a great deal of things for its run time. Festival programmer Jane Schoettle had the following to add in detail about the film ahead of its 2016 premiere:

A reunion between two old school friends (Sandra Oh and Anne Heche) sparks a no-holds-barred war of attrition, in this outrageously madcap black comedy.

Get ready to rumble! The latest from prolific indie writer-director Onur Tukel takes a set-up that in most films would lead to a heartwarming story of female friendship — and uses it instead as the springboard for an outrageously madcap black comedy.

One-time college pals Veronica (Sandra Oh) and Ashley (Anne Heche) run into each other at a party. The women, now in their forties and having not seen each other since school, find that their lives have taken radically different paths. Ashley is barely scraping by as a painter of politically charged canvases, while Veronica is married to a wealthy businessman who’s about to profit hugely off yet another US-led war in the Middle East.

Within minutes of their reunion, a rivalry is revived, old wounds are torn open, and a Manhattan stairwell becomes home to a woman-on-woman brawl the likes of which are seldom seen outside of martial-arts epics. And now the gloves are off. Over the course of five years and three bloody, bone-crushing rounds, Catfight’s formidable adversaries will lose everything they cherish, and rail furiously as their fortunes are subject to wild reversals.

Oh and Heche are comedy gold, and they tackle their roles (and each other) with vicious brio. As he tracks his antagonists’ unpredictable fates and ferocious fisticuffs, Tukel also manages to get in several jabs at US foreign policy and conservatism.

Catfight is a knock-down-drag-out great time, and its attitude — toward combat and politics alike — is strictly no holds-barred.

With all certainty, an official trailer finally arrived on Thursday with a date set for March 3 from Dark Sky Films. Check it out below and stay tuned for more coverage in the coming weeks!

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