Revenge, Reheated and Overcooked
If Bound to Vengeance teaches us anything, it’s that revenge is a dish best served with a migraine. This 2015 horror-thriller, which premiered at Sundance for reasons that likely haunt the selection committee to this day, wants to be a feminist revenge fantasy but instead plays like a Lifetime movie filmed inside a fever dream directed by someone who just learned the word “empowerment.”
It starts with a premise that should, on paper, grab you by the throat: a woman escapes captivity and decides to turn the tables on her abductor. What could go wrong? Well, apparently everything. The result is a film that manages to be grim without substance, brutal without impact, and empowering in the same way a wet match is illuminating.
Eve, the Avenger with No Plan (and Apparently No GPS)
Our protagonist, Eve (played by Tina Ivlev), begins the movie in a basement chained to the floor by Phil (Richard Tyson, doing his best “creepy suburban dad who owns too many baseball caps” impression). In a promising first five minutes, she bludgeons him with a brick, unchains herself, and escapes.
Then the problems begin—and they never stop.
Eve, who has successfully freed herself from a deranged kidnapper, immediately decides that the best course of action is not to run away or call for help, but to team up with her captor in a twisted scavenger hunt to rescue other victims. It’s like Taken, if Liam Neeson had Stockholm Syndrome and the camera operator had vertigo.
This premise could’ve worked in the hands of a director with a sense of irony or pacing, but here it’s executed with the precision of a drunk surgeon. The script insists on dragging Eve through endless moral and physical obstacles that make less sense the longer you think about them. By the time she’s duct-taping her kidnapper to a van seat and barking orders at him, the film’s internal logic has been left bleeding in a ditch somewhere.
Phil: The Least Interesting Monster in the Basement
Richard Tyson’s Phil is supposed to be terrifying—a manipulative predator who’s always one smirk away from another unspeakable act. Instead, he comes off like the kind of guy who gives unprompted barbecue advice at gas stations.
He spends most of the film shackled, beaten, and still somehow annoyingly smug. He taunts Eve, lectures her on morality, and drops exposition like a podcaster who’s convinced he’s being profound. Tyson’s performance is more sleazy than scary, but not in a fun, campy way—just in a “please stop talking and die already” way.
And yet, somehow, Phil isn’t even the worst villain here. That title goes to Ronnie, Eve’s boyfriend, who turns out to be part of the trafficking ring. The big reveal lands with all the surprise of a flat tire—you see it coming from miles away but still sigh when it happens. His motivation? Unclear. His characterization? “Male.”
The Victims: Tragic, Disposable, and Occasionally Weaponized
Bound to Vengeance wants to say something about female empowerment, but it treats its women like trading cards in a trauma deck. Each new victim Eve discovers is less a person and more a morality checkpoint. There’s the terrified Nina, who promptly impales herself after a five-minute cameo. Then there’s Laura, who mistakes Eve for an accomplice and beats her before dying. And finally, Lea, who somehow survives long enough to play sidekick before fading into plot purgatory.
The film seems to think this revolving door of tragedy adds emotional depth, but it only adds fatigue. The constant cycle of rescue-attempt-failure-repeat makes the 93-minute runtime feel like purgatory with bad lighting.
The Violence: Gritty, Grimy, and Weirdly Pointless
There’s no denying Bound to Vengeance is brutal—but brutal in that distinctly empty, post-Saw way, where gore substitutes for gravity. The violence isn’t shocking or cathartic; it’s monotonous. Every injury blurs into the next, and every death feels both inevitable and meaningless.
Director José Manuel Cravioto seems to think we’ll interpret this relentless punishment as realism, but it’s just exhaustion disguised as art. There’s a fine line between visceral and gratuitous, and this movie cartwheels over it while screaming “This means something!”
To make matters worse, the cinematography insists on reminding us that this is Serious Cinema™. Every blow, every scream, every gunshot is bathed in murky, self-important lighting. It’s as if the film itself is embarrassed by its exploitation roots but too insecure to commit to anything else.
The Feminist Revenge Fantasy That Forgot the “Feminist” Part
Here’s where Bound to Vengeance really fumbles the ball: it wants to be about female empowerment but ends up reinforcing every horror trope it claims to subvert. Eve isn’t given agency so much as she’s trapped in a moral obstacle course built by male characters.
The film’s idea of empowerment is watching a traumatized woman repeatedly get manipulated, beaten, and betrayed while everyone around her explains her feelings back to her. Even her “victories” are tainted by the fact that they’re usually the result of luck, coincidence, or Phil being an idiot.
By the final act, when Eve confronts her boyfriend and discovers the full extent of the trafficking operation, she’s less a symbol of strength and more a walking embodiment of narrative fatigue. Yes, she kills her abusers—but the movie seems more interested in her suffering than her survival.
The Plot: A Maze Designed by a Sadist with ADHD
If you tried to draw a map of this movie’s plot, you’d end up with a tangle of arrows, blood splatters, and unanswered questions. Why does Eve agree to drive around with the man who kidnapped her? Why are the other kidnappers apparently living in Airbnbs? Why does everyone she rescues immediately die?
The story moves with the logic of a bad dream—you know something awful is happening, but it’s too incoherent to matter. The final act, in which Eve confronts Phil’s family, should be the moment of catharsis. Instead, it’s a shrug. The film ends abruptly, like it realized it had no idea how to conclude and decided to stop filming mid-sentence.
The Moral of the Story (If There Is One)
If Bound to Vengeance has a message, it’s buried somewhere beneath the blood, duct tape, and poor decision-making. Maybe it’s about trauma. Maybe it’s about how revenge can’t undo suffering. Or maybe it’s just about how you should always keep your van keys in a safe place.
Whatever it’s trying to say, the execution drowns it in endless scenes of misery masquerading as meaning. By the end, you don’t feel vengeance—you feel relief that it’s finally over.
Final Verdict: Justice Served Lukewarm
Bound to Vengeance mistakes pain for power and shock for storytelling. It’s the cinematic equivalent of someone explaining trauma through interpretive dance while juggling chainsaws—technically impressive in parts, but mostly terrifying for all the wrong reasons.
The performances are committed, the premise has potential, and there’s a genuine spark of anger buried in the muck. But the film smothers that spark under an avalanche of grim repetition and half-baked moralizing.
If this was meant to be a statement on survival, it’s a cruel one: everyone survives except the audience’s patience.
Final Score: 3/10
A revenge thriller that’s all vengeance and no vision. Grim, grimy, and about as empowering as a flat tire in the middle of nowhere.

