An exciting new documentary about female wrestling in Bolivia is coming to DVD next week.

‘Mamachas del Ring’, directed by Betty M Park, follows the story of four female wrestlers trying to make it in the male-dominated wrestling scene in Bolivia. The film centers on Carmen Rosa who struggles between her personal life with her family and her fame in the ring.

Watch the trailer for the film below — you won’t be disappointed!

‘Mamachas del Ring’ will be released on DVD next Tuesday (June 21st). Click here to purchase. More information here.

Thoughts: The trailer for the film looks amazing. We’ve seen the film and will be reviewing this week. Stay tuned!

Synopsis for the film below:

[notice]About the film

Set in the heights of the Bolivian Andes, Mamachas del Ring is the story of Carmen Rosa the Champion, a cholita and wrestler who struggles to make it on her own in the male-dominated world of Bolivian professional wrestling.

In 2004, Carmen Rosa was at the forefront of a cholita wrestler revolution. Never before had Bolivia seen an indigenous woman take her petticoats and bowler hat into the ring, and the crowds couldn’t get enough. Along with three other cholitas, Carmen became an international star, and all four were anointed the Mamachas of the Ring.

The film begins in 2006, shortly after their return from a star-making turn on Peruvian TV—but their rapid success has come at a price. Jealousy and envy begin to ripple throughout the wrestling community, and eventually they are black-listed from performing in Bolivia’s main wrestling league by its notoriously egotistical league commissioner, Don Juan Mamani.

Betrayed but not discouraged, the Mamachas take matters into their own hands. They pound the pavement organizing their own shows, contracting media appearances, and traveling for days to perform across Bolivia, often to paltry crowds who can barely afford to pay the entrance fee. They were the first indigenous women to wrestle; they were the revolutionary stars. Now they are the first women wrestlers to manage their own business and contracts, desperately hoping to regain their crowns.

The pressures of daily living and gendered responsibilities begin to eat away at the foundation of the Mamachas, and Carmen Rosa increasingly shoulders more of the work burden. Her day job as a street vendor begins to suffer and her attention to her family dwindles, until one day her husband issues her a firm ultimatum: wrestling or your family.[/notice]