

Movies Like Boyka: Undisputed IV
In the fourth installment of the fighting franchise, Boyka is shooting for the big leagues when an accidental death in the ring makes him question everything he stands for. When he finds out the wife of the man he accidentally killed is in trouble, Boyka offers to fight in a series of impossible battles to free her from a life of servitude.
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How Good Is Boyka: Undisputed IV?
Ratings across IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, and TMDB, plus our verdict.
Where to Watch Boyka: Undisputed IV
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Frequently asked about Boyka: Undisputed IV
Common questions people search for, with answers written by us at MoviesPack.
Why does Boyka feel responsible for Viktor Dorogin's death?
During a sanctioned underground fight, Boyka delivers a fatal blow that kills Viktor Dorogin in the ring. Even though the fight was legal within the underground circuit, Boyka's deeply held personal code of honor — forged through years of prison fighting and spiritual redemption — makes him feel morally culpable for taking a man's life. He sees himself as the direct cause of Viktor's wife Alma becoming a widow.
What drives Boyka to fight for Alma's freedom?
After Viktor dies, his wife Alma is forced into indentured servitude by the crime boss Zourab, who holds her as collateral against Viktor's debts. Boyka, wracked with guilt over causing Viktor's death, takes it upon himself to earn Alma's freedom through fighting — the only currency he has. His quest is an act of atonement rather than heroism, rooted in his belief that he owes a debt to the family he inadvertently destroyed.
What is the significance of Boyka's faith throughout the film?
Boyka's Russian Orthodox faith, established in earlier films in the series, is a constant internal counterweight to his violence. He prays before fights and frames his redemptive mission in quasi-spiritual terms, treating the quest to free Alma as penance for his sin of killing Viktor. His faith does not make him passive — it gives his violence moral direction, transforming him from a self-glorifying fighter into someone fighting for a cause beyond himself.
How does the final fight with Zourab's champion resolve Boyka's arc?
In the climactic fight, Boyka defeats Zourab's prized fighter, which forces Zourab to honor the wager and release Alma. Crucially, Boyka chooses not to kill his opponent even when he has the opportunity, reflecting his growth from the ruthless prison champion he once was. The restraint signals that his atonement is genuine — he no longer fights to dominate or destroy, but to protect and make right.
Does Alma end up with Boyka at the end of the film?
No. Once Boyka secures Alma's freedom and she is safe, they part ways. The film deliberately avoids a romantic resolution — Boyka's debt to her is one of guilt and honor, not romantic attachment. The ending reinforces that his redemption is its own reward, and Alma's freedom is the full payment of the debt he owed to Viktor.
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