‘Queen of the Ring’: Women’s Wrestling’s First World Champion

“Queen of the Ring” utilizes the standard biopic formula to give credit to the force of nature who changed women’s wrestling forever.
‘Queen of the Ring’: Women’s Wrestling’s First World Champion
(L–R) Mildred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), Mae Young (Francesca Eastwood), and Joe (Gavin Casalego), in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures
Mark Jackson
Updated:
0:00

PG-13 | 2h 10m | Sports, Biopic | 2025

“Queen of the Ring” is the true story of Mildred Burke, women’s wrestling’s longest-reigning world champion and the world’s first million-dollar female athlete.

Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards) struts her stuff, in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards) struts her stuff, in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures
Burke’s story has largely been ignored by the wider wrestling world until now. However, since pro wrestling has been experiencing a popular culture resurgence over the past few years, with Florence Pugh’s 2019 wrestling biopic “Fighting With My Family,” last year’s biopic “The Iron Claw,” and the recent documentary series “Mr. McMahon” on Netflix—it’s time to give credit where credit is due.
Bertha (Cara Buono, L) wrestles Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Bertha (Cara Buono, L) wrestles Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures

Early Years

Born Mildred Bliss in Coffeyville, Kansas, Burke (Canadian actress Emily Bett Rickards) recognized her wrestling destiny early. She was drawn to the ring long before the industry’s men acknowledged the concept of women’s wrestling, not to mention Burke’s undeniable talent.
Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards) meet her future husband, Billy Wolfe (Josh Lucas), in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards) meet her future husband, Billy Wolfe (Josh Lucas), in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures

At age 15 she dropped out of school. While waitressing on the Zuni Indian Reservation in Gallup, New Mexico, she wrestles a few men at a carnival, pinning them with ease, whereupon Billy Wolfe (Josh Lucas) a wrestler himself and an early industry empresario, sees opportunity knocking.

Burke leaves New Mexico and has a wrestling career spanning the 1930s to the 1950s. Which is fairly remarkable, since women’s wrestling was illegal across much of the United States.

Scoundrel Husband

Burke marries Wolfe, who promises her (and her young son) the moon–but their marriage quickly deteriorates as Wolfe can’t keep his hands off the ever-growing stable of female wrestling recruits that he coaches. If Burke is going to keep her self-respect intact, she has no choice but to forge her own career and fight for a seat at the exclusively male wrestling table.

Her career oversees a string of firsts in women’s wrestling: mentoring a new generation of female wrestlers, the first “shoot match” (a real match with no predetermined script), bringing women of diverse ethnic backgrounds into the sport, headlining decades worth of matches, and taking on both male and female challengers. Apparently, she only ever lost to a man once in her entire career.

Elvira Snodgrass (Marie Avgeropoulos) is recruited by Billy Wolfe (Josh Lucas), in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Elvira Snodgrass (Marie Avgeropoulos) is recruited by Billy Wolfe (Josh Lucas), in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures

A League of Her Own

“Queen of the Ring” gets off to a feeble start, with emotionally forced acting reminiscent of a high school production—something that’s almost always the director’s fault. Despite this, the film slowly gathers steam in terms of believability. The cast try their hands at period accents and mannerisms in an attempt to ground “Queen of the Ring” in the nostalgic Americana so successfully achieved in “A League of Their Own.” But it doesn’t quite hit the mark. Similar historical story, though.
Babs Wing (Damaris Lewis, L) wrestles Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Babs Wing (Damaris Lewis, L) wrestles Midred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures

“Queen of the Ring” utilizes the standard biopic formula: a Campbellian hero’s journey told with flashbacks and historical references that establish context. The film gives Burke full credit as the force of nature who changed women’s wrestling forever. It should delight fans of Netflix’s “GLOW,” about women’s wrestling on television in the 1980s.

“Queen of the Ring” fills in the blanks on earlier decades of women’s wrestling. It celebrates the women-doing-what-only-men-did, boundary-breaking genre, similar to “The Herricanes,” and “Hidden Figures.” It also presents the grit, glamour, and graft required to succeed in pro wrestling, making for a captivating story.
(L–R Fight promoter Jack Pfefer (Walton Goggins), Mildred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), and her son Joe (Gavin Casalego), in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
(L–R Fight promoter Jack Pfefer (Walton Goggins), Mildred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards), and her son Joe (Gavin Casalego), in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures

That said, while “Queen of the Ring,” does show the toll the ring takes on bodies, it’s nowhere near as brutal as 2008’s “The Wrestler,” starring Mickey Rourke. There’s none of the modern male pro-wrestling extravaganza, what with steroidal behemoths doing body-wrecking swan-dives off 30-foot cages and body-slamming into folding chairs. Stapling opponents with staple guns. And so on. Thank goodness.

Mildred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards, lying on the ground), gets knocked out, in "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Mildred Burke (Emily Bett Rickards, lying on the ground), gets knocked out, in "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures

The only drawback is that, while it’s rated PG-13,  if “Queen of the Ring” had been shot in the 1970s, it might almost qualify as soft porn. America has slowly acclimatized from Dallas Cowboy cheerleader costumes to a nonstop barrage of Brazilian thong-bikini images, the barely-there female Olympic running shorts, to the latest, seriously-not-there female volleyball outfits.

Europeans and Scandinavians call Americans prudes, and at age 14 I agreed with the sentiment, but I find the older I get, the more cheerfully prude I get. I’m turning into the Church Lady. I eschew this scanty-uniform trend! While I’m not a fan of the Muslim hijab, niqab, or burqa, maybe it’s time for a little balance around here.

Emily Bett Rickards as Burke, looking at times like a Canadian Kate Beckinsale, is the film’s beating heart. Expect to see a lot more of her. No pun intended.

Promotional poster for "Queen of the Ring." (Sumerian Pictures)
Promotional poster for "Queen of the Ring." Sumerian Pictures
‘Queen of the Ring’ Director: Ash Avildsen Starring: Emily Bett Rickards, Josh Lucas, Kelli Berglund, Walton Goggins MPAA Rating: PG-13 Running Time: 2 hours, 10 minutes Release Date: March 7, 2025 Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Would you like to see other kinds of arts and culture articles? Please email us your story ideas or feedback at [email protected]
Mark Jackson
Mark Jackson
Film Critic
Mark Jackson is the chief film critic for The Epoch Times. In addition to film, he enjoys martial arts, motorcycles, rock-climbing, qigong, and human rights activism. Jackson earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Williams College, followed by 20 years' experience as a New York professional actor. He narrated The Epoch Times audiobook "How the Specter of Communism is Ruling Our World," available on iTunes, Audible, and YouTube. Mark is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic.