11 Wrestling Movies You’ve Never Heard Of

By Jack Morrell /

8. Below The Belt (1980)

Kind of like Flashdance without all the leg warmers, Below The Belt is the touching story of no-nonsense New York City waitress Rosa who, stuck in a rut, is noticed by a wrestling promoter and spirited out of her old life to train to be a professional wrestler. The film details Rosa€™s training and touring with his crew, before her first match with a veteran performer who dislikes her, and may be about to go into business for herself€Shot in 1974 but taking six years to be released, Robert Fowler€™s feel good working class romp does a good job of portraying the rigours of the road and the camaraderie of the locker room, although there€™s an overreliance on the musical montage. It€™s based on a true story, too €“ writers Fowler and Sherry Sonnett adapted award-winning artist and writer Rosalyn Drexler€™s autobiographical novel To Smithereens, which detailed her brief pro wrestling career as Rosa Carlo, the Mexican Spitfire. At one point, Drexler was such an inspiration that no less a pop culture maven than Andy Warhol created silkscreen paintings based upon her likeness. Rosa€™s trainer in the film was legend of wrestling Mildred Burke, playing a fictionalised version of herself. Burke was a truly groundbreaking performer, having apparently wrestled 200 men during her career. She broke into business the hard way: trainer and promoter Billy Wolfe didn€™t like her at first, and told a male trainee to bodyslam her, figuring it€™d put her off. Instead, Burke slammed the guy out of his socks, and Wolfe was similarly, if metaphorically floored €“ he trained her himself, and eventually married her.