Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Red Sonja (2025 film)
2025 American sword and sorcery film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Red Sonja is a 2025 American sword and sorcery film directed by M. J. Bassett and written by Tasha Huo, based on the character by Robert E. Howard as adapted by Roy Thomas.[1][4][5] The film stars Matilda Lutz as Red Sonja, alongside Wallis Day, Robert Sheehan, Michael Bisping, Martyn Ford, Eliza Matengu, Rhona Mitra, and Veronica Ferres. The film follows the adventures of the nomad barbarian Sonja, who unites a group of unlikely warriors to face off against Dragan and his deadly consort Annisia.[6]
Red Sonja premiered in Russia on July 31, 2025, and received a limited theatrical release in the United States on August 13 by Samuel Goldwyn Films.[7] The film received generally mixed reviews from critics.
Remove ads
Plot
Summarize
Perspective
A young Red Sonja's homeland, Hyrkania, is invaded by barbarians, slaughtering most of her people and forcing her to flee into the vast woods nearby. Separated from her tribe, she searches for other Hyrkanians while worshipping the forest goddess Ashera.
Years later, mercenaries enter the forest, hunting animals for their horns, and Sonja tracks them. She learns they collect exotic creatures for gladiator games honoring Emperor Dragan. When Dragan visits to inspect the animals, Sonja attacks the hunters as punishment for cruelty. She is discovered by Dragan's men and knocked out by Karlak, the general. Dragan orders Sonja to be taken to the capital to fight in the games.
Dragan owns half of a Hyrkanian book that grants him ancient scientific knowledge, enabling him to energize the capital with arcane power. He seeks the other half to unlock its secrets and expand his control. He believes Sonja's map of the uncharted forest will guide him to the exiled Hyrkanian refugees who have the missing text.
Sonja joins slaves fighting a cyclops controlled by one of Dragan's devices. She rips off the device and convinces the creature that Dragan is the enemy. The cyclops attacks, injuring Dragan. Sonja then destroys Dragan's energy device before fleeing.
Sonja and the slave fighters escape to the mountains, pursued by Dragan's soldiers and his lover Annisia, a deadly warrior who suffers from schizophrenia. Dragan promises Annisia he will marry her if she brings him Sonja's head. Sonja tries to distance herself from her allies so Dragan will target her alone, but they insist on staying together. They plan to attack the town supplying Dragan with creatures to draw him out. While preparing, the missing Hyrkanians find Sonja and reveal they have the second half of the holy book Dragan seeks.
When Dragan arrives with his forces, a battle begins. Dragan's army defeats the Hyrkanians and he gains the second half of the book. Sonja and Annisia face off in combat, and Sonja is mortally wounded. She is saved from a killing blow by her horse, which knocks Annisia away and brings Sonja to the statue of Ashera in the forest's heart. In near-death delirium, Sonja sees Ashera speak to her in the guise of her dead mother. Ashera heals Sonja and sends her back to battle to bring justice to evildoers.
Sonja reunites with her allies who thought she was dead, and they attack Dragan again. Dragan confronts Annisia, who told him Sonja was dead, and she learns he caused her schizophrenia with fake medicines. They stab each other in a lovers' quarrel, and Dragan escapes into the wilderness.
Sonja tracks Dragan and confronts him as he takes his dying breaths. He says the second half of the book is worthless since it focuses on healing and nature instead of power and energy. Sonja reveals that she knows he was also a child refugee of Hyrkania, and she feels responsible for his dark turn in life because she lost her connection to him after the disaster. Dragan dies holding her hand and the ripped pages of the book are lost in the wilderness.
Sonja leaves the forest to explore the world. In an epilogue set years later, one of her fighter allies finds her in a tavern and tells her that her help is needed. She gathers her weapons and leaves for a new adventure.
Remove ads
Cast
- Matilda Lutz as Red Sonja
- Wallis Day as Annisia[8]
- Robert Sheehan as Emperor Dragan the Magnificent[9]
- Michael Bisping as Hawk
- Martyn Ford as General Karlak, a man/animal hybrid[10]
- Eliza Matengu as Amarak
- Veronica Ferres as Ashera and the mother of Red Sonja
- Luca Pasqualino as Osin the Untouched
- Katrina Durden as Saevus[11]
- Rhona Mitra as Petra
- Manal El-Feitury as Ayala[11]
- Danica Davis as Teresia
- Kate Nichols as Berreth
Remove ads
Production
Summarize
Perspective
Following the 1985 film starring Brigitte Nielsen, a second Red Sonja film was in development for several years. In 2008, Robert Rodriguez and his production company Troublemaker Studios were working on a version that would have starred Rose McGowan as the titular character.[12] By 2009, however, the Rodriguez project had been scrapped, and in February 2010, rights holders Nu Image announced they were moving forward with another projected new film to be directed by Simon West. Producer Avi Lerner said he would like to see Amber Heard take the role of Sonja, after having worked with her on Drive Angry. Lerner said the film would shoot before the sequel to Conan the Barbarian.[13]
In August 2012, at the premiere of The Expendables 2, West said that the film was still a go and would be out soon.[14] On February 26, 2015, Christopher Cosmos was set to write the screenplay from scratch.[15] According to Deadline, Millennium Films would finance and produce a new Red Sonja movie with Lerner and Joe Gatta producing alongside Cinelou Films' Mark Canton and Courtney Solomon and writing by Ashley Miller.[16][17]
In October 2018, Bryan Singer was confirmed to direct the film.[18] After multiple men accused Singer of sexual assault in January 2019, Lerner released a statement in defense of Singer, praising his "remarkable vision and acumen" and saying that he knew "the difference between agenda driven [sic] fake news and reality".[19] The following month, Millennium Films announced Red Sonja was no longer on their slate of films due to the allegations against Singer.[20] In March 2019, Lerner dropped Singer from the project because he was unable to secure a domestic distributor.[21] In June 2019, Joey Soloway signed on to write, direct and produce the film.[22]
In February 2021, Tasha Huo was hired to write the script with Soloway, and casting was set to begin.[23] By May, Hannah John-Kamen was cast in the titular role.[24] In March 2022, John-Kamen and Soloway left, with M. J. Bassett replacing Soloway as director and rewrote Huo's screenplay.[25][26] That August, Millennium confirmed that the film had begun production in Sofia, Bulgaria, with Matilda Lutz playing the title role.[5][9][27] In September 2022, Oliver Trevena was set to appear as Tr'aal.[28]
In October 2022, Rhona Mitra was cast in an undisclosed role, while Trevena exited the film due to scheduling conflicts.[4] In November 2022, Veronica Ferres was cast as Ashera and the mother of Red Sonja.[29] On 12 November 2022, it was reported that filming had been underway for two weeks at studios in the Thermi suburb of Thessaloniki, Greece, with post-production to be completed there as well.[30] By February 2023, Kate Nichols, Katrina Durden, Manal El-Feitury and Danica Davis were cast in undisclosed roles, while Alison McCosh and Clint Wallace were revealed to be the costume designer and production designer, respectively.[31] The film completed post-production by October 2023.[32]
Luke Lieberman serves as a producer with Red Sonja LLC, while Nick Barrucci serves as an executive producer for Dynamite Entertainment.[5]
Lutz said she prepared for the role by reading Red Sonja comics sent to her by producer Luke Lieberman and intentionally avoided watching the 1985 film. From the comics, Lutz said she found the primary essence of the character is that "she's a warrior, but she's also a survivor. I wanted to give her humanity and vulnerability."[33]
Lutz began intense sword training in Bulgaria one month before shooting due to director Basset's preference to shoot fight scenes in long, extended takes.[33]
Remove ads
Adaptation
Summarize
Perspective
Red Sonja drew on a variety of details from the comic book source material. From the 1973 Marvel Comics origin story by Roy Thomas and Barry Windsor-Smith, the connection to a supernatural deity is maintained, but Sonja's motivation based on rape and revenge is removed. Visual aspects of Sonja's armored appearance and face paint, as well as the character of Dark Annisia, are based on the 2013 "Queen of Plagues" storyline by writer Gail Simone and artist Walter Geovani, published by Dynamite Comics.[34] Emperor Dragan the Magnificent first appeared in Dynamite's 2019 "The Queen's Gambit" story by writer Mark Russell and artist Bob Q.[35]
Prior to the film's release, Lutz said the film would differ in tone from the "male gaze" of the comics, and present "a completely different story". However, the character's trademark bikini would remain the main costume for the film.[36] On September 10, 2024, a set photo featuring a partially armored Sonja was posted to the Red Sonja Instagram account,[37] followed by a clip showing the bikini.[38] In the film, Red Sonja's chainmail bikini "is used as an element of power that the emperor has over her ... But then she owns it," said Lutz.[39]
Remove ads
Release
By February 17, 2025, Signature Entertainment picked up Red Sonja's UK and Irish distribution rights and set a theatrical release of late 2025.[40] On March 26, 2025, Samuel Goldwyn Films picked up the U.S. distribution rights to the film.[41] The film was released theatrically in the United States for one day only on August 13, 2025,[42] which will be followed by release on video on demand on August 29, by Samuel Goldwyn Films.[6]
Marketing
A teaser trailer debuted at the 2023 San Diego Comic-Con to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the character.[43][44] The trailer and poster were released in early July 2025.[6]
Remove ads
Reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 56% of 55 critics' reviews are positive.[45] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 41 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[46]
The Guardian gave the film two stars out of five, criticizing its "clunky script" and summarizing it as a "soggy, CGI-infused, low-budget confection".[47] The Wrap said the movie "improves on the 1985 film, but its low budget holds it back".[48] AIPT praised Lutz's performance in the lead role, citing her "confidence... vulnerability and humor".[49] Collider gave the film a mixed review, saying Lutz "evolves well into the role as the film proceeds, building a solid and empowered character" but criticized the production design and combat choreography.[50] The Hollywood Reporter posted a negative review, saying the film is "hampered by ... low-budget production values" and the story was "a deadly blend of cheesy and dull".[51] Esquire listed Red Sonja as one of the best action movies of 2025 but gave the film a mixed review, saying it "should have been a TV pilot", but Lutz "looks great taking big swings".[52]
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads