Friday, August 17, 2007American Ninja
DIGG THIS ARTICLE. 1985, United States. Starring Michael Dudikoff, Steve James, Judie Aronson, Guich Koock, John Fujioka, Don Stewart, John LaMotta, Tadashi Yamashita. Directed by Sam Firstenberg. Buy it from Amazon
It almost seems moot for me to review this film, seeing as how I already reviewed the Mithun masterpiece Commando, which is basically this movie with some crazy shit tacked onto the beginning and end, and a fat guy in a magical flying car. But sometimes you just have to do what you have to do, and I live the sort of life where, "write a long, rambling review of American Ninja" is something I just have to do. My relationship with both ninjas and ninja movies is pretty deep. Enter the Ninja? Yeah, saw it. Revenge of the Ninja? About a million times, buddy. I plan to go to my grave watching Revenge of the Ninja (or Gymkata). Pray for Death, Nine Deaths of the Ninja, Ninja III: The Domination? But of course. I'd even seen about eight billion different Godfrey Ho/Thomas Tang/Joseph Lai ninja films. While I was inflicting the Bollywood ninja film, Commando, on Teleport City's friends over at The Ninja Consultants, Ninja Consultant Noah commented that the movie was pretty much an exact copy of American Ninja. The weird fact was, I had never seen American Ninja. I have no idea why. Maybe the title wasn't exotic enough. I didn't, in my youth, want to watch a movie full of guys in weight lifter pants and American flag bandannas showing off their numchuck skills. Of course, if you gave me that movie now, I'd probably weep with joy Shamed by my lack of knowledge in this aspect -- because I live the sort of life where you can be shamed by not knowing enough about American Ninja -- I decided it was high time that I sit down and educate myself about this action-packed, true-story documentary film. Now, keep in mind that reviewing ninja movies is incredibly dangerous, and that may be part of the reason I hesitated to review American Ninja. Because all of them are documentaries that reflect 100% true and factual events, you are always in danger of accidentally divulging secret ninja secrets, and divulging secret ninja secrets can result in you walking out the front door to drop off your dry cleaning (I'm a grown up; I have dry cleaning to drop off), and suddenly you have a shuriken (that's a throwing star to you, son) in your face. In the ten years or so that I've been doing Teleport City, I have encountered a number of ninjas who sought me out purely because I wrote a review of one ninja movie or another. Rarely have they attempted to assassinate me, but remember that just because something hasn't happened doesn't mean that it couldn't happen. Since I started Teleport City many moons ago, I've gotten a lot of email from people claiming to be ninjas. One was so batshit insane that I had to break confidence and send it around to other people. I've since lost it, but maybe someone still has it. It's the one where a single sentence goes on for a full page. There was also a guy who used to write all the time and tell me about how he was a member of a secret ninja society that guarded Washington, D.C. But my favorite email is probably from a ninja who believed beyond a shadow of a doubt that I was Jim Kelly. The first time he wrote me, telling me how he loved my movies and wanting to know if I had any merchandise for sale, I did my best to let him down politely and tell him I'm not Jim Kelly without making him feel stupid. Then a few months later he wrote me, addressing me as "Mr. Jim Kelly" again. This time he was asking me what I'd been up to and when I was going to make another movie. For this time, I just didn't reply, figuring that would cause him to lose interest. I still get email from him, maybe two or three times a year, and he is still convinced that I am Jim Kelly, international martial arts champion and star of such films as Black Belt Jones and Enter the Dragon. I guess I should just roll with it. I mean, it's easy to understand the misunderstanding. I have reviewed some Jim Kelly films in the past. Both Jim and I are from Kentucky. And frankly, I have to admit that the physical similarity is pretty striking: ![]() From time to time, I think about pitching a reality show to E! in which I get to fly this guy over from Germany, and the two of us go on a road trip to try and track down the elusive and reclusive Jim Kelly. But I'm full of ideas best categorized as "things only I want to actually see." Like how if I won the lottery, I would blow millions on making remastered, widescreen, uncut DVDs of various Eurospy films just so I could watch them. But before all that, before Teleport City and ninjas who prowl the rooftops of Washington, I already had a long and interesting association with the shadowy warriors known as ninja, starting when I was but a young lad. When I was young and interested in karate classes to make up for my rather slight build, I went to a martial arts expo at the Kentucky State Fair just outside of Louisville. I think in this same year, I saw Weird Al Yankovic play at the Redbirds Stadium, which was better than the year before, which I think is the year I saw Eddie Rabbit perform on the back of a flatbed trailer in Broadbendt Arena. That man sure did love a rainy night. I'd go to the fair every year with my uncle and grandfather, who would enter the various horse shows going on as part of the festivities. It was a pretty slick set-up. You got to sleep in horse stalls out back with the horses and had the run of the fairgrounds and expo center. What could beat sleeping in the dirt and then sneaking onto the midway at two in the morning in hopes of catching gypsy rituals, freaks being lead about on leashes, accordion-playing midgets, and other Something Wicked This Way Comes shady goings-on? I never did see any of that stuff, but I did find my uncle and his friends hunkered down in the shadows smoking doobies (they were doobies back then and forever), and this carny did let me into the inflatable moonwalk once after hours, and he didn't even try to molest me in return. Anyway, the martial arts expo that year was part of the big expo where you learn about livestock and jellies and stain removal pastes as you wander the display tables in search of free stickers and patches. You could also buy lots of martial arts stuff, like numchucks (saying "nunchuka" is for suckers and Japanese people), ninja stars, pictures of Bruce Lee, and that poster of the guy raising one arm above his head that was meant to teach you about strike points. ![]() And there was always at least one karate school with a name like "Soaring Shotokan Eagle Dojo USA Eagles America...Eagle" putting on a demonstration. At this time in life, everything I knew about martial arts I'd learned from watching Bruce Lee and ninja movies. That Kung Fu TV show had always been way too boring to hold my attention. But even as a relatively ignorant little kid, I could tell more than half these guys were overstuffed karate hacks who'd had about as much real martial arts training as I'd received by watching Ultraman. But the crowd ate it up, and the more superfluous American flag paraphernalia in which you draped yourself, the more the crowd loved you. That way they could love this crazy "oriental fighting" while still being a proud American. This hit its most illogical and awesome extreme when a dude with a big thick 70s mustache peeking out from the top of his mask came out to do his kata while wearing a red, white, and blue ninja uniform (I think someone probably wore the same thing in Alexander Lou's Ninja in the USA). When the tubby guy in a gi with a bald eagle and American flag airbrushed on the back came out to do a series of half-assed judo throws and blocks, the place erupted. I'm almost certain he did it all to "Eye of the Tiger." Over the years, I had the pleasure of watching a lot of these guys perform, and I was amused and shocked by how similar their presentations always were. All you had to do was have an authoritative delivery of your motivational speech (which was usually better than a middle school gym teacher, if nothing else), and people were ready to throw money at you to train them to be invincible fighting machines. No matter how lame the show of skill, people generally bought it because, well, if you can't trust a karate guy in an American flag bandanna, who can you trust in this crazy world of ours? Never mind that most of these masters knew nothing, or only knew about bar fights or enough so that when they tried to teach other people, they'd get that other person seriously hurt if they ever tried to whip out their skills. Now one caveat: most of these guys were over six feet tall. They had pretty solid builds in the arms and legs and were, to a man, a little doughy around the midsection. Basically, they were built like Joe Don Baker. And it's entirely likely that any single one of them could walk up and kick my ass. I might get a lucky blow or two in, but it wouldn't make much difference. Being well-versed in winning bar fights and street brawls makes you a bad-ass. It doesn't make you a martial artist, though, and it doesn't necessarily mean people should be paying you a monthly fee to have you make them stand in the horse stance and punch the air for thirty minutes, twice a week. These guys were more or less the prime target audience for a movie like American Ninja. Ninjas made their big screen American debut in James Bond's jaunty Japanese adventure, You Only Live Twice. Now those guys were pretty cool, and they were led into battle by Emperor of the Universe Tetsuro Tanba, but the James Bond ninjas had one fatal flaw: they acted sort of like real ninjas might. Meaning that they dressed for the occasion. They dressed to blend in to whatever surroundings they found themselves. They did not run around in the signature black clothes and hood. And when assaulting a vast, space-age compound inside a hollowed-out volcano, even the female ninja wore the most sensible outfit: a small white bikini and canvas sneakers. And so they became nothing more than a cultural footnote. It wasn't until the late 1970s that the ninjas as we now know them made their big push to emerge from the shadows. We covered much of this history, as well as the actual history of the ninja, in our reviews of Enter the Ninja and The Octagon, so if you need to know that stuff -- and who doesn't -- you best cruise on over to that review and see how well we did with accuracy (OK, I think). Now the first ninja exploitation films out of the gate were pretty fun, but the problem with banner ninja movie star Sho Kosugi was apparent: he was kind of, you know, not white. And the 80s were the decade of the big, tough, white action hero, with Action Jackson sort of hanging out on the corners, depressed that he missed the more colorful and diverse action decade of the 70s by a few years. Sure, Enter the Ninja starred a white guy, but that was a foreign white guy, and foreign white guys were even worse than black American guys, who were perfectly acceptable second bananas. What we really needed was an American white guy ninja, someone who could wear an American flag bandanna and pose in front of a big-ass American flag while wearing his ninja uniform. Someone that the guys at the state fair could rally behind and model themselves after. We needed an American ninja. In 1985, Cannon gave these guys their hero. These guys, however, were just a primer for later events in my life and my ever advancing experiences with the ninja. Specifically, 7th grade. It was the year 1984. Visions of a soul-crushing totalitarian regime as predicted by George Orwell had not come to pass, though Ronald Reagan did have a fair number of people convinced that we were all going to be nuked by Commies day after tomorrow, or sometime round about then. My friends and I, inspired by Red Dawn, built a bomb shelter in the woods down by Harrod's Creek (it was a foot deep hole, covered by some plywood, with a rusty canteen full of brackish water in it). The year's top songs included Ratt's "Round and Round," "Sister Christian" by Night Ranger, "Wake me Up Before You Go-Go" by Wham, and a little something called "Thriller." At the roller rink, we held hands with girls and skated to "Hold Me Now" by the Thompson Twins, and at the movies we went to watch a young Kevin Bacon stand up against the oppression of right wing Christianity by dancing in barns. And at night, once a week, the nation gathered around the television set to watch a guy wearing white loafers and pastel t-shirts catch drug dealers in neon-soaked Miami. It was my seventh grade year, and things were OK. I was head over heels for this neighborhood girl named Dani; I was in the middle of the home economics class we all had to make, where I made green jell-o with Vienna sausages suspended in it; and I was just beginning to discover my knack for math was nearing its end. At my school, inventively named Oldham County Middle School, life revolved around skate parties, school dances, and hanging out in the gym and the hallways before class. They used to make us all gather in the gym in the morning, either so they could keep track of which buses had arrived or so they could keep up out of the bathrooms and hallways before the teachers arrived. Maybe both. Anyway, sitting in the bleachers in the morning is when you made all the plans with your friends for what you were going to do when you got out of the gym and could wander around the halls for twenty minutes before class. Who liked who, who broke up, what you watched last night on television, whether or not you'd been able to find the new Storm Shadow figure at Airway. Or maybe it had become Target by then. Can't remember exactly, and any time I look up something like "When did Airway become Target," I get lots of information about the effect of bronchial thermoplasty on airway distensibility. One of the kids that sat with our large group most mornings was named Wojo. Wojo got heavier into the Miami Vice than anyone else, and would often show up to school decked out in full Crockett attire -- white blazer, white pants, white canvas loafers with no socks, and of course, some confectionery colored pastel t-shirt. On multiple occasions he'd come in, glance around nervously, and mutter half-audible curses under his breath. He'd continue this until someone else would get fed up, roll their eyes, and despite the fact that everyone already knew what was coming, would have to ask, "What's going on, Wojo?" Wojo would glance around a little more, then say, "Well you can't tell anyone, but last night I found out my girlfriend's dad was involved in some major shit. Some bad shit with Colombians. One of them found out I knew, and I think they might be trying to kill me." "This would be the girlfriend no one has ever met?" "I told you, she goes to private school. I think she and I might have to run," Wojo would continue, unfazed. "I heard one of them talking to someone on the phone in Spanish. I think they're calling in a hitman from Colombia." "Wojo, you can't speak Spanish." "Didn't that happen on Miami Vice last week?" Wojo's ongoing shadow war with Colombian gangs running their operation out of LaGrange, Kentucky, stood out even among my friends, which included among others, a guy who had memorized the entire "Robin Williams Live at the Met" stand up comedy routine and constantly tried to pass it off as his own material despite the fact that everyone had already seen "Robin Williams Live at the Met." "What?" he'd stammer. "Robin Williams made that same joke? Man, that's weird, huh?" The thing that really made Wojo stand out from the crowd, besides his commitment to every detail of his stories, was that his best friend and running mate was a kid named Sean who was a total freak about ninjas. I mean a total freak. We all loved ninjas, and the coolest kids in the group were the ones who had seen movies like Enter the Ninja or, even better, Revenge of the Ninja. I remember the first time I saw it. I was at my grandparent's house for the weekend. They just got cable TV, and I was up late watching HBO, hoping to catch a glimpse of some boobs or something. Revenge of the Ninja gave me that and so much more. I was going wild, and although I didn't go out and buy a headband that said "Ninja" on it in that jagged "oriental" typeface, I was definitely hooked on gory ninja films. I might have even bought a couple throwing stars at the state fair one fall, but I stopped short of owning a full ninja uniform. Not only did Sean own a ninja uniform, he frequently wore it to school, tabi boots and all. The school wouldn't allow him to wear the hood since it covered his identity -- as if there were other kids walking around the halls gussied up in full ninja regalia and talking about sai and bo staffs in a lilting Southern accent. Like his friend Wojo, Sean would often come into the gym in the morning and sit down ready to tell a story about how the Black Dragon Ninja Society was after him for revealing their secrets to the White Heron style or something like that, but Sean had betrayed the Black Dragons because, although they may have trained him, their leader had turned his back on what it meant to be a true ninja and was now in league with villains, presumably the same Colombian drug cartel that was gunning for Wojo (remember -- Edward James Olmos' character in Miami Vice was always alluding to his own spooky ninja past, so the pieces all fall into place). Suffice it to say, the sight of Wojo and Sean, the ninja and the Miami Vice cop, prowling the halls of the middle school was enough to strike most people dumb. Who knew that beneath the veneer of cows, grain silos, and Future Farmers of America champions, Oldham County was a seething cauldron of murderous South American drug cartels and ancient ninja secret societies. Sean was often asked by classmates to demonstrate his ninja prowess during gym class, and though he'd favor us with a stance or two, he'd never show off any of his true skills. "Maybe when you're better prepared," he'd admonish us in his spooky ninja talk. Then he'd strike that weird "one finger upraised on one upraised hand with arms folded in front of my body" stance that so many ninjas do. Sadly, he never disappeared into a puff of multi-colored smoke. Years later, while in college, my interest in the deadly arts was renewed. There was this guy in Gainesville named Grandmaster Philip Holder. I knew his name before he came to town, because I'd always sees his ads in Inside Kungfu. Yes, I was dorky enough to read that magazine, but where else are you going to learn about important things like Chuck Norris brand karate stretch denim jeans with that extra little bit of spandex mixed in so you can deliver a roundhouse kick without feeling all constrained. And need you even ask? They were boot cut, for Chuck. ![]() The reason everyone noticed the Grandmaster Philip Holder ads wasn't just because there seemed to be about three of them in every issue. It was because my friend Bill once pointed out to everyone that in tiny, tiny print above the words "Grand Master" were the words, "Self-Proclaimed." Well, you know, they're always teaching you that the true master is inside, and Bruce Leroy could only get The Glow once he understood this, so I can only assume that Grandmaster Philip Holder must have been blinded by the glow of his own ego. I mean martial arts prowess. I can't remember where he was based out of at the time, but we all rejoiced the day flyers started popping up around town announcing -- or proclaiming, if you will -- his intention to grace the greater Gainesville area with his presence. "Grandmaster Philip Holder's Self Defense Dojo and Bodyguard Training" said one. "Grandmaster Philip Holder's Self Defense Dojo and Ninja Training Camp" said another. I can only imagine that all of north Florida's weightlifter-pant-wearing meatheads and fat chicks who liked anime were chomping at the bit to see if they had the skill and the inner fire (and the clearable checks) it would take to become a pupil of the legendary Grandmaster Philip Holder. When Philip Holder moved his global training center to Gainesville, Florida, he put signs up everywhere looking for students who wanted to be trained by "the world's third deadliest man." No one ever explained that title to me. I guess there is some international governing body that hands out "deadliest man" rankings, but that still doesn't explain the exact nature of Holder's claim. Is he the third man to hold the title "world's deadliest man," or is it that in the race to be the world's deadliest man, there are two men in the world deadlier than Phillip Holder? Anyway, we all know who the world's deadliest man truly is: ![]() I can't say at the time I that I was actively applying myself to the martial arts. It was my last year at school, and besides, you know. It was hard and all. But from time to time I'd show up down at a place called Whirling Tiger, a kungfu studio where they had some top notch teachers, including a certain Sifu Dez, who was among the most serious people I'd ever met regarding martial arts training. I mean, the guy had a Bruce Lee body. Normal people don't have those. We have the bodies of the various sidekicks in Bruce Lee films. Besides being the type of kungfu practitioner who could knock your socks off (literally and figuratively), Dez was a gentle artistic soul, as we found out the day a couple people wandered upstairs into his room and found a painting he'd done of his girlfriend standing in front of a pool of water. Out of the water arose a mighty whirlwind water spout, the spiraling waves of which eventually formed Dez. Any van would have been proud to call it its side door art. Anyway, Dez is probably the only true bad-ass I've ever met. Powerful and quiet and humble, yet confident, as one can be when one can whup the ass of pretty much anyone one meets. If only he could have inspired the same in me. I was and forever shall be the bad student, the one in the movies who is always finding ways to cheat training or whining, "But master! Why do I have to catch these frogs?" So one day, some of the Whirling Tiger guys decided to drive out to Grandmaster Philip Holder's compound, since he apparently had something like that. It was a courtesy call. No challenges were to be issued. Folks just wanted to check out the new guy in town and offer a hand of friendship on behalf of unifying the martial world of north Florida. Dez was always big on that sort of thing. So out we went. It took a while, and we got lost a couple times because this was back in the days before Google Maps. By and by, we realized our mistake was in searching for something that looked like a bunch of wooden buildings with guys in black masks throwing down smoke bombs and jumping on trampolines or running backwards up walls in fast motion. You know, ninja camp stuff. Instead, we had to turn into the lot of one of those sprawling storage garage places and search for Grandmaster Philip Holder's suite numbers, which actually meant his warehouse numbers. Eventually we found them, or it, because there was only one. It was full of those usual redneck guys -- big and out of shape, but in a way that makes them perfectly suited for pounding me into the ground as easy as they'd pound a six pack of Pabst before it became the irritating hipster beer of choice and everyone went back to Natural Light. Actually, I don't know if any hipsters actually drink PBR, or if they just talk about it and go to hipster bars that ironically offer PBR 2-for-1's. These big guys (this camp was too bad-ass for the fat chicks who liked anime; they would have to stick to classes at the university gym) were sweating it out in the July heat in some rental garage on the outskirts of town, doing the usual half-assed horse stance and punch thing with battle cries while Grandmaster Philip Holder sat at the far end of the warehouse on his giant throne.
Even more than the state fair guys, these were the target audience and eventual spawns of American Ninja, a movie that exists in that cultural limbo that exists in every culture: that stuff from someone else's culture is cool, but it's even cooler when someone from my culture does it. That's why there are so many movies where white guys and black guys -- American guys -- emerge as the absolute best martial artists in the world. Yeah, all that Asian stuff is pretty bad-ass, but it's even more bad-ass when Americans do it, probably whilst accompanied by that military marching band drum music. I suppose there are a lot of Chinese and Japanese movies where Asians kick the ass of Americans at traditionally American things, like...I don't know. Eating hoagies and suing each other. So yeah -- there are racial and cultural issues that can be addressed via an analysis of a movie like American Ninja, but some things are just too silly to warrant serious discussion, and Lord knows this is one of them. Besides, the flip of the "Americans are more awesomest" jingoism is always that, misguided though it may be in many places, these movies also increase awareness and appreciation of other cultures, even if it's somewhat silly aspects of other cultures. Since the silly parts of other cultures are usually the most fun parts, I have no beef with this. So with that brought up and off-handedly dismissed, it's time to take a closer look at American Ninja and see what I'd been missing. What I discovered pretty much from the very first couple of minutes is that American Ninja is undoubtedly one of the all-time greatest movies ever made, ever. It wastes absolutely no time, getting to the black-clad ninja madness almost immediately. American forces in the Philippines are being preyed upon by slobby rebels who keep hijacking their arms shipments and CO's daughter shipments. Despite this, no one higher up in the army thinks that maybe something is wrong, like that trained American soldiers should be able to whoop ass on anyone who attacks them whilst wearing a sweat-stained Aloha shirt. Or maybe that if armament shipments keep getting stolen, we should take a different route, or quit stopping for obvious ambushes. I mean, in the history of action films, when your convoy gets held up by unexpected road work, that road work has never been anything but an ambush. The only legitimate road work that happens in action films happens at the very edge of an interstate ramp that drops off into nothing but affords you a chance to jump the chasm and land on another section of road beyond the gap. Also, you would assume that American soldiers getting attacked by an army of ninjas would be the sort of thing that makes the news. Usually, when one American soldier gets killed somewhere, it at least gets a mention. Now if several are killed, and killed by ninjas no less, I'm saying that it should attract at least a little attention. No one at the base seems to mind much, though. Nor does anyone think that the commanding officer's policy of "just let them take what they want and go," is anything out of the ordinary. Why the hell send an armed escort if you are going to forbid them to defend the thing they are there to defend? You might as well have your convoy driven by Eddie Deezen. I know the military has all sorts of screw-ups, but I think even at its worst point, someone would still have taken notice of the commanding officer who routinely hands all his weapons over to ninjas without so much as a fight.
That is, until mysterious loner G.I., Joe (Michael Dudikoff, in his first starring role), shows up and starts kicking hijacker ass and throwing screwdrivers and tire changing tools at them, which results in ninjas positively pouring out of the jungle to jump on trampolines and do cartwheels over trucks! Although the commanding officer urges his men to stand down and just let the ninjas take what they want, Joe is unwilling to stand by and let these ninjas get away with highway robbery -- especially when they start menacing the colonel's hot daughter (Judie Aronson). That calls for some kungfu bad-assery, followed by a long trek through the jungle, during which the chick will go from bitching about her hair and Gucci shoes to falling in love with stoic man of action. Joe, for his bravery in the face of attack, finds himself ostracized by his fellow soldiers, hated by his superiors, and marked by the mysterious ninja leader named Black Star Ninja, who wants to kill Joe...permanently! This also means that Joe will have to fight ninjas pretty much every scene. It turns out the hijacking is facilitated by the corrupt base...guy (John LaMotta). The chain of command here seems pretty questionable and includes the colonel's hot daughter in a position of significant authority, as well as a chauffeur with big poofy 80s hair. But the base commanding guy is dastardly and working with the even more dastardly French terrorist, Ortega. Judging from his name, bad fake accent, and line of do-it-yourself taco making kits, I'm pretty sure Ortega is just a Mexican guy pretending to be a French guy in order to mess with people. His chief weapon in the fight against, well, no one really, is the mysterious Japanese guy named Black Star Ninja. Anyway, I think his name is Black Star Ninja. Maybe that's his rank. Similar confusion arose in Commando, when the head ninja was named Ninja. Black Star Ninja kills a lot of his own ninjas, which is common among evil villains but never makes much sense. for starters, who is going to want to work for you if they know you kill your own people for no reason? And second, I assume that, even though there are like eleven million ninjas in this movie, ninjas are actually hard to come by, and if you have an army of them, you should practice ninja conservation and try to conserve the ones you've found. Anyway, thus the whup-ass begins, and it doesn't really end until the final credits roll, unless Joe is stopping to cut some chick's dress shorter so she can more effectively run through the jungle with him. Along the way, we will spend a bit of time exploring Joe's mysterious past he can't remember but is somehow responsible for him being well-versed in the craft of the wily ninja. Here's a hint: he's a ninja. A mysterious Japanese dude (John Fujioka) will wander in from time to time and yammer on about the truth being revealed when Joe is ready -- much like Sean the Middle School Ninja.
With so many ninjas and so much ninja action crammed into this film, the story is easy to ignore. It's also easy to ignore because it's pretty dumb. I said when I reviewed Commando -- which again, is almost a shot-for-shot remake of American Ninja, only with the added bonus of a finale featuring dudes in Michael Jackson jackets shooting grenade launchers -- I find it hard to believe that ninjas and greasy thugs in Hawaiian shirts routinely rob American military convoys, and no one thinks that's a bad thing. But since we're quickly up to our armpits in ninjas, who really cares about the plot, which is really more of a series of loosely connected action scenes strung together haphazardly by some scenes of the bad guys talking and hanging out at the ninja training camp, which is one of those training camps like Al Quaeda uses, all full of monkey bars and flaming hoops and trampolines. At least the ninjas will use the Gymboree skills they acquire. I've never understood the Al Quaeda training video where the guys are doing monkey bars and jumping over stuff and doing kickboxing. Dude, you assholes strap bombs to yourselves and blow up innocent people. When are you going to need your monkey bar skills? When has Al Quaeda ever battled anyone in a kickboxing fight? Damn, if this was 1985 and we weren't as sensitive, you know that shit would be a movie, where the only way to beat Al Quaeda is to send Michael Dudikoff deep into the heart of Afghanistan to fight the supreme Al Quaeda kickboxer in a deadly underground martial arts tournament. American Ninja features more ninjas per minute (NPM -- you can immediately tell whether or not a movie is any good if it has high NPM) than probably any other ninja movie ever made -- a claim I do not make lightly. If anyone can think of a movie with more ninjas in it, let me know. It also has a colossal body count, in the gloriously violent grand tradition of 80s action films. These days, the carnage is largely property-related, with a few token deaths here and there. But American Ninja kills like a hundred dudes, no exaggeration. Only Arnold in Commando kills more (as opposed to Mithun in Commando). Leading the ninjas into battle, and occasionally killing them for no real reason, is Tadashi Yamashita as Black Star Ninja. While watching Commando, I kept thinking that Danny Dengpongza looked a lot like Tadashi Yamashita. In fact, at first I thought Ninja the ninja actually was being played by Yamashita. I didn't even know at the time that Yamashita played the exact same role in American Ninja, which means the producers of Commando probably combed India looking for a guy who looked like Tadashi Yamashita, which is probably the first and last time anyone anywhere in the world has combed a country looking for a guy who looked like Tadashi Yamashita. Yamashita -- who was also known for a brief period as Bronson Lee (Champion!) -- was the go-to guy whenever an American movie needed an Asian ninja guy and Sho Kosugi was nowhere to be found (which was often, as finding a ninja is hard, and Sho had to finish Black Eagle). Yamashita did an episode of Knight Rider (where he starred as "Ninja Assassin"), which is probably an episode I'm going to have to track down and see. And although Edward James Olmos' captain dude in Miami Vice never fully copped to his secret ninja training background (no wonder Wojo and Sean got along so well), I think we can assume that, if they'd ever followed through with it, he would have ended up fighting Tadashi Yamashita at some point. Yamashita's most recognizable, at least to people like me, for his appearance in a holy trinity of American martial arts movies. He's the "Eastern Trainer" in Gymkata, where he taught Kurt Thomas the ultimate martial arts skill (walking up stairs on your hands -- we know this is the ultimate skill, because Chiun made Remo Williams do the same thing, though thankfully Fred ward was not wearing the same microshorts as Kurt Thomas). Then he's the treacherous Sakura in Chuck Norris's The Octagon, where the ultimate ninja skill is thinking to yourself in loud whispers (and where he runs a ninja training camp that is, I assume, very similar to the one run by Grandmaster Phillip Holder). And then there was American Ninja, where he runs another ninja training camp and helps a French guy named Ortega steal weapons from the U.S. military, which doesn't seem to bother anyone except for Joe. And eventually Joe's buddy Curtis, played by bad action movie stalwart Steve James.
Steve James -- has this guy ever NOT been enthusiastic? Steve James was awesome. I don't think he was in a good movie his entire career, with the exception of I'm Gonna Git You, Sucka, but you'd never know that from the amount of zeal and energy he maintained no matter how awful the cinema surrounding him. James is one of those actors where whether he's good or bad becomes moot, because he seems to naturally adapt to the one role he always plays, sort of like Fred Williamson or Patrick Swayze. Say what you will about Swayze, but it's rare you ever find him not fully committing himself to a role. In a movie where main villain Tadashi Yamashita speaks in stilted, stammering English and main star Michael Dudikoff shows all the emotion of, well, an emotionless ninja killing machine, the job of turning in a performance actual humans can relate to falls on the square shoulders of James, who is up to the task, as he always was. Bad action movies lost a great asset the day he passed away. As goofy as American Ninja's plot may be, that didn't stop it from needing four writers. Seriously? Four people to write American Ninja? I mean, I love American Ninja, but this is the sort of concept movie a producer tosses off to a writer to start and finish in a single coke-fueled weekend. "Hey buddy, Globus wants to make a movie called American Ninja. Have the script on my desk by tomorrow." Done deal. Instead, we have four cats putting their two cents in: Gideon Amir, Paul De Mielche, Avi Kleinberger, and James R. Silke. Of those guys, only Silke had any actual writing credentials. The other three were Israeli television producers, and American Ninja is the first and last writing credit for all of them, except for the guys who also get credit for American Ninja II. Silke, on the other hand, is not only named Silke, but he also wrote Revenge of the Ninja and Ninja III: The Domination, so you know the man is a solid source of verified lore when it comes to ninjas. Plus, later in life he went on to write Barbarians, a documentary about twin barbarian bodybuilders who defend jugglers from an evil warlord. I think it was made for Discovery Channel. Anyway, I assume that Silke did all the writing, and those other jokers leaned in to his squalid Tijuana hotel room (because I assume all movies are written while drunk in a squalid Tijuana hotel room with a passed out, possible dead, hooker in the bed) from time to time and said something like, "I think he should put a bucket on his head. Now give me writing credit," while Silke was busy trying to write gold like American Ninja throwing a screwdriver through a guy's sternum. Anyway, the story isn't all that great, but whatever. It's not like Silke probably didn't know that, and to make up for it, he crammed his movie to bursting with ninja action and trucks knocking over fruit carts.
Bringing to life Silke's bold vision of a world chock full of ninjas running around in multi-colored ninja outfits in the middle of the day is our good buddy, director Sam Firstenberg. Firstenberg was the go-to guy whenever Cannon Films needed a cheap action film or movie about plucky, neon-clad breakdancers saving the community center. Firstenberg directed two of the best ninja movies ever made -- this one and Revenge of the Ninja. He also did Ninja III: The Domination, but honestly, all I remember from that movie is Lucinda Dickey straddling some dude while she pours V8 juice down her chest, a scene that is grosser than it is sexy, possibly because although I love Lucinda Dickey, I don't like V8 and feel that she should have just stuck with the more traditional champagne. Granted, the scene happens at the end of her work-out, but who hasn't drunk champagne during their work-out? I know I have. Seriously. I have. Oh, and a ninja kills a telephone pole repairman in the movie. It was probably the son of the telephone repairman who got killed in Assault on Precinct 13. Firstenberg also gave the world Breakin' II: Electric Boogaloo with Lucinda Dickey in a tasty array of neon leotards (Lord, the debt I owe Firstenberg is huge), American Ninja II (not Electric Boogaloo), Delta Force III, and a couple Cyborg Cop movies, so if you're guessing he's a director I approve of, then you know me well. And I am not ashamed that I know far more about Sam Firstenberg's directorial career than I do that of Luis Bunuel. Maybe if Bunuel had been making movies like Breakdancing Barbarian Cyborg Ninja, I'd have been more interested in him. Instead, he wasted his career making movies about, you know, whatever the hell The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie was about. Firstenberg's direction is, as with pretty much any Cannon Studio production, competent without standing out. He shoots martial arts action better than most modern directors, primarily because he sets a camera up a slight distance and lets guys fight, rather than shaking the camera around and doing lots of fast edits and close-ups of Jet Li's ear. Speaking of the martial arts, you can't really review a ninja film without mentioning the stunts and fight choreography. Stunts and fights here were coordinated by a guy named Steven Lambert, who still gets work as a stuntman and choreographer for some pretty huge movies. But back in American Ninja days, he was fresh off Revenge of the Ninja and Tuff Turf, where he had the unenviable task of making James Spader seem like a street wise bad-ass. Lambert works in conjunction with fight choreographer Mike Stone, a regular fixture in Cannon's ninja movies despite the bad blood that arose between the would-be actor and studio heads Golan and Globus. Stone was the guy who developed the Enter the Ninja project that launched the entire ninja craze of the 1980s. Mike Stone brought them the project with a lead actor already in mind: Mike Stone. He was already an accomplished martial artist and understood how to adapt actual martial arts to movie martial arts choreography. I mean, he was no Sammo Hung, but he was all right. Cannon was excited about the project and threw the full force of their mighty cinematic empire behind the project -- oh, except they fired everyone they hired.
It was standard operating procedure for Cannon to hire a crew, then immediately fire them all and replace them with cheaper labor and nepotistic associations from Israel. If you look at the credits for American Ninja, you'll see that it looks like pretty much the same thing happened. Among the Enter the Ninja casualties was Mike Stone, who was bumped from the lead in favor of Italian tough guy actor Franco Nero. Stone's consolation prize was that he was kept on as the movie's martial arts choreographer and as the ninja double for Nero, who may have been able to box in the ears of young Italian street punks but was hardly passable as a martial artist. In order to soothe Stone's bruised ego, Cannon promised him the lead in their next ninja movie, which would also feature Enter the Ninja co-star Sho Kosugi, who swore he would not do the movie unless Cannon made good on their promise to Mike Stone. That movie was Revenge of the Ninja, and you might notice that it stars Sho Kosugi, but Mike Stone is nowhere to be found. Even if he'd been relegated to supporting star status, Stone could have played the role of Kosugi's martial artist cop buddy, but that role went to Keith Vitali (who squared off with the big three in Jackie, Sammo, and Yuen Biao's Wheels on Meals). Lambert was back as stunt choreographer, but the fights themselves were coordinated by Sho Kosugi, which means after promising Stone he wouldn't do the movie without him -- according to Mike Stone, mind you -- Kosugi went on to take both the lead role and the fight choreography from Stone. Much of this story depends on earlier stories told by Mike Stone, so true accounts may vary. And since Sho Kosugi is meditating in a mist-filled temple built deep within an active volcano until mankind needs him once again, we may never know or really care. For all I know, as bad as much of the acting is in Cannon films, Stone could have been that much worse, and it was for the best that he was never the lead. Whatever happened between Stone and Cannon couldn't have been that awful, because Stone was back in action, if not on the screen, for American Ninja, and he stuck around for American Ninja II and American Ninja III. Since then, he's gotten bit parts here and there, usually sans spoken lines, and still does stunt and choreography work from time to time. Guys like Stone are the types of guys I wish more people interviewed. Stars and directors have their experiences, but these dudes, working in the trenches often in bizarre circumstances, always have the best stories. Hey Stone, if you are out there searching Google for your own name and you run across this review, get in touch. I won't promise to cast you in the lead of my upcoming ninja film, though, because that role is already reserved for Rosario Dawson. Since the screenplay is tentatively titled Sexy Ninja Shows Her Big Boobs Often (it sounds more elegant in Japanese), you probably don't want the lead anyway. And I'd bet good money there is already a Japanese movie called Sexy Ninja Shows Her Big Boobs Often.
Anyway, Stone's work here ain't half bad, which is something, considering Dudikoff is barely passable as a martial artist. Luckily, Stone gets the services of Steve James and a whole slew of stuntmen who had nothing to do but wear ninja outfits and do somersaults, so there's plenty of stuff to help carry Dudikoff. Fights are better than average for an American martial arts film, and American Ninja proves that sometimes quantity can be better than quality. The final duel between Joe and the Black Star Ninja (who probably gave himself that name because his real name was Corey or something -- no one is afraid of Corey the Ninja) is pretty awesome, because rather than just fight each other, they first run through the entire gauntlet of toys at Black Star's ninja camp. And then Black Star starts whipping out all sorts of crazy ninja gadgets, culminating in his deft employment of a ninja laser! I mean, it's not as cool as the brightly colored smoke bombs ninjas disappear into all the time, but a ninja laser is pretty good. American Ninja: the greatest ninja movie ever made? I guess I still have to give the edge to Revenge of the Ninja, but American Ninja runs a pretty damn close second. Dudikoff may not be much of an actor, but he's not so bad that you'd be shocked by how bad he is. He's well-suited for the role, and he has Steve James on hand to provide some actual charisma. Anyway, you hardly need to worry about character development and such when your characters are attacked by armies of ninjas like every thirty seconds. How Cannon never got around to pairing American Ninja with Sho Kosugi, I do not know. American Ninja -- man, I can't believe I waited so long to see this movie, but I'm glad it was out there, crouched in the shadows like Sean the Middle School Ninja, waiting for the time when I was ready. Labels: Martial Arts: Ninjas, Series: American Ninja, Studio: Cannon, Year: 1985 posted by Keith at 5:01 PM | 9 Comments Wednesday, May 02, 2007DOA: Dead or Alive
DIGG THIS ARTICLE. 2006, United States. Starring Jaime Pressly, Holly Valance, Sarah Carter, Devon Aoki, Natassia Malthe, Eric Roberts, Matthew Marsden, Kevin Nash, Collin Chou, Kane Kosugi, Steve Howey. Written by J.F. Lawton, Adam Gross, and Seth Gross. Directed by Corey Yuen Kwai.
I don't really play video games. I mean, back in the 1980s, I would pump a few quarters into TRON or that Buck Rogers game, and I had fun enough with the Atari 2600 and, later, the Nintendo Entertainment System, especially Kid Icarus and Metroid. Since then, I have played Resident Evil and Resident Evil II, and that's it. Oh, no, wait. At a party last week, I herded some sheep in a Nintendo Wii game. Something about Apes Gone Wild? I can't remember. I have no idea why, in a monkey-themed collection of games, I was a dog herding sheep. I guess the monkeys owned the farm, so it was sort of a whole horrible Planet of the Apes scenario. Point is, I don't know a lot about video games. It's just not a medium that I have ever gotten into. So I can't comment very authoritatively on anything that was made after, say, Crazy Climber, but I have never the less seen a lot of video game related movies. In fact, I've seen just about all of them. And while some video games really do have a rich enough mythology or back story to serve as a decent foundation for a movie (Resident Evil, Silent Hill -- even if you don't think the movies were good, the games at least provided enough meat for the framework), many others do not. Of course, that doesn't stop them from being made into movies anyway.
Such is the case with DOA. As best I can gather, DOA started life as a beach volleyball video game, with the hook that all the characters were hot cartoon chicks with tiny bikinis and huge tits, and you could somehow set the jiggle rate on their boobs. Then somehow the DOA games became fighting games, with the attraction being the same. The approach was twofold in its success. First, it was simple, sleazy titillation. I mean, hot chicks with bouncy boobs in tiny bikinis, engaging in lots of activities that require their jiggly parts to jiggle? What's not to like? Secondly, the games tap into the fundamental desire of just about all guys to, at least for a while, be a really hot chick. I'm pretty firm in my belief that most men harbor this fantasy, and I think nowhere is it more obvious than in the tendency of men to always play the hot chick character in a video game. Chun Li is nothing if not a symbol of ten million wanna-be gender-benders. You can support or detract from my theory all you want, but what's most notable about DOA is that "hot chicks play volleyball and fight" as a plot is pretty much the single greatest plot ever invented and the sole reason the technology of cinema and video games was invented. Thousands of years of intellectual evolution and technological innovation has finally resulted in my ability to watch a movie with the plot, "hot chicks play volleyball and fight."
DOA the movie was directed by Hong Kong action director Cory Yuen, who has a track record that boasts more high points than low and who specializes in turning attractive women into on-screen kungfu bad-asses. Under his tutelage, Cynthia Rothrock, Joyce Godenzi, Michelle Yeoh, and Shannon Lee were all transformed into believable martial arts powerhouses (OK, Rothrock was already a kungfu powerhouse; he just figured out how best to choreograph her). And while Hsu Chi, Karen Mok, and Vicky Zhao may not have been 100% believable as ass-kicking superwomen, that doesn't change the fact that Yuen's So Close was completely awesome. Yuen is also one of the few Hong Kong directors to have a big hit as a director in the United States, that hit being the Luc Besson-produced The Transporter starring Jason Statham. When news that there was going to be a DOA movie produced first hit cult film fandom, there was a lot of eye-rolling and "yeah, whatever, man" reaction. But when it was further revealed that Cory Yuen would be director, ears (among other things) pricked up and a lot of action film fans were suddenly a lot more willing to give the film a try, even if the inevitable PG-13 rating meant it would be all tease. If anyone was going to be able to direct a dumb fun "hot chicks play volleyball and fight" movie, it would be Cory Yuen. So people waited. Trailers played, and the reaction was tentatively positive after the initial negative reaction. Sure, the movie looked colossally goofy, but it also looked like it would sport high energy and be a lot of fun. And then the release date came and went, and there was no movie. DOA vanished, bumped from the release schedule and shelved for any number of reasons, the most likely of which was probably, "Wow, this movie is awful." Which is a shame. I mean, how bad could the film possibly be? They released Norbit, for crying out loud, and Epic Movie. And those had to be worse than DOA which, if nothing else, at least would feature hot chicks playing volleyball and fighting.
DOA eventually began to trickle out to theaters in other countries, though it still remained absent from American theaters, and fans of Cory Yuen, action movies, video games, and hot chicks in bikinis started looking to foreign DVD releases to see the movie. Was it worth the wait? Or the trouble to see it? Yes and no. DOA is pretty much exactly what you would expect it to be from the elements listed above. It is dumb. Extremely dumb. It is full of cheap titillation and gratuitous bikini ass shots, which always gets the Teleport City seal of approval. The script is paper thin, and what little story there is makes no sense anyway. Most of the cast doesn't even seem to realize they are supposed to be acting in a movie. The fight choreography, involving almost no trained martial artists, is heavy on editing, camera trickery, and computer manipulation. And yeah, it's all a whole lot of gloriously stupid fun. The plot revolves around a group of women invited to compete in a semi-secret martial arts tournament where, of course, shady shenanigans are being engaged in behind the scenes. Enter the Dragon's plot has proved useful so many times, the writers of this film decided there was no reason not to dust it off one more time. We first meet Katsumi, head of a ninja clan with a massive temple complex you would think someone in modern-day Japan would notice. Katsumi's brother disappeared during the last tournament, presumed dead, and she is determined to uncover the truth behind his disappearance, even if it means violating the laws of her clan. She leaves for the tournament with two more ninjas in hot pursuit: the noble Hayabusa, who has a thing for Katsumi, and the vengeful Ayane, herself the former lover of Katsumi's brother. Katsumi is played by the indescribable Devon Aoki, whose continued presence in the world of cinema is one of the great mysteries of the entertainment world. She's a horrible, horrible actress, completely incapable of anything beyond a single blank expression and a single, monotone style of dialog delivery. On top of that, she's pretty weird looking. How she ever got a part in a movie is beyond me, but how she continues to get parts, however small they may be and however bad the movies they are in may be, I simply can't explain.
Accompanying her, Hayabusa is played by none other than Kane Kosugi, son of the legendary (to me, anyway) Sho Kosugi, who starred in many of the best ninja exploitation films of the 1980s and then went on to host Ninja Theater and release a ninja exercise video in which he was accompanied by the scantily clad Ninjettes. One gets the feeling that Sho probably appreciates DOA. Kane started his acting career alongside his dad, always playing the son of whatever ninja guy Sho was playing at the time. Kane never developed much in the way of an American acting career, but he clicked in Japan and managed to forge a pretty consistent string of jobs, including a role in a Japanese sentai television series (those superhero shows that get turned into the Power Rangers in the United states), a role in one of those crappy new Ultraman shows, and most recently one of the leads in Godzilla: Final Wars (even though the lead role should have gone to Godzilla). He isn't really that great of an actor, but he's no worse than his dad (although his dad also wasn't a native English speaker), and he does handle action scenes well, which is generally all he's expected to do. As he gets older, he is looking a lot like his father, so much so that I'm beginning to wonder if Kane isn't Sho Kosugi, his revitalized youth the result of some esoteric ninja ritual or something. Oh sure, you say, but what about all those times Sho and Kane appeared alongside one another? Well, yeah. Maybe -- or maybe they just told us that was Kane Kosugi. Honestly, they could have hired any kid. Anyway, Hayabusa is along for the ride, trying to convince Katsumi that she should return home while also helping her out with her investigation. Ayane is a little more hostile. Despite her love for Katsumi's missing brother, Ayane holds clan law more important, and clan law dictates that when Katsumi abandoned her post as leader, she was marked for death. Ayane is played by Natassia Malthe, who has a string of cult film credits to her name but is probably most recognizable, to people who might recognize such an actress, for her role as Typhoid in Elektra or for her upcoming title role in the sequel to video game based movie Bloodrayne. I may be one of the few people in the world who would think, "Elektra and Bloodrayne II? Sounds good to me!"
Second on the list of DOA combatants is Tina Armstrong, played by Jamie Pressly of My Name is Earl fame. Pressly is pretty much the only person who showed up to this film with the intention of acting, and she steals the movie as a pro wrestler looking for the opportunity to prove she's a genuine fighter. The film introduces us to her as she reclines aboard her yacht while wearing an American flag motif bikini, stirred out of her sunbathing just long enough to beat the snot out of a bunch of pirates (lead by none other than Robin Shou, former star of such movies as Mortal Kombat, and, umm, well, just that and Mortal Kombat II, really). When our founding fathers first set forth the basic premise of this great land of ours, I'm sure that they could conjure up no greater symbol of American awesomeness than a hot chick in an American flag motif bikini beating up pirates. OK, maybe Thomas Jefferson would disagree. But whatever. Fuckin' Jefferson. Ask Ben Franklin. He'd be on board. Tina's pro-wrestling dad is also in the tournament, play by real-life pro wrestler (there's something...ironic? about the phrase "real-life pro wrestler") Kevin "Big Daddy Cool Diesel" Nash, who is dressed up more or less like Hulk Hogan in a somewhat lame gag I'm sure Nash found amusing. Since Kevin Nash's job in this movie is to drink beer and go, "That's my little girl!" he turns in the second best acting job after Pressly.
Finally there's Holly Valance as Christie Allen, a posh thief who shows up to the tournament while on the run from the Hong Kong police. Or someone like that. Valance is definitely no actress. I think she was some sort of mid-level Aussie pop star before this movie, and it's unlikely much will change after this movie. She's hot, though, and just bad enough an actress to still be somewhat acceptable in a movie of this nature. And she does the thing where she throws a gun and a bra up into the air, then sticks her arm up so that her bra goes magically on just as she catches the gun and whups the butt of the world's most incompetent bunch of cops. I mean, really, when a kungfu chick, however hot she may be, asks you to hand her a bra, do you really offer it to her as it dangles from the barrel of your gun? And I don't mean that figurative gun. I mean the actual gun, the one she can now kick out of your hands. Along with a bunch of other fighters you will never care about (and most of whom just disappear at random throughout the movie with no explanation presented anywhere other than deleted scenes), the three ladies head to the island fortress lorded over by brilliant mastermind and DOA tournament manager Eric Roberts. Yes, folks, Eric Roberts, looking like a dude who would hang around the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame a lot, telling young kids about what a genius Jimmy Page was. In a feat of casting not rivaled since the days when Black Belt Jones cast Scatman Crothers as a karate master, crummy movie mainstay Eric Roberts is the lord of DOA, and with the help of his nerdy assistant Weatherby, Roberts aims to use the DOA tournament as a way to inject the world's best fighters with nanotech robots that will harvest their genetic information and make it downloadable to a pair of sunglasses which will then instill the wearer with nigh invincible kungfu prowess.
Seriously, man, that's the plot. All Eric Roberts needs to do for his nefarious scheme to work is, 1) capture each of the best fighters in the DOA tournament, 2) strap them into his gigantic info downloading machine, and 3) manage to keep a clunky pair of sunglasses on his face while fighting. And the end result is that you will be a slightly better fighter than most other people. On the grand scale of nefarious schemes, this one ranks pretty close to the "moronic" end of the bell curve. I mean, how is being a marginally better kungfu guy than most other kungfu guys going prove profitable to anyone other than, say, a guy in the Ultimate Fighting Championship? And then, you have to get the ref to allow you to wear sunglasses while you're fighting. And it's not like Eric Roberts put a sports band or anything on those glasses, so they will eventually just fall off. But it doesn't matter, because we're a few centuries away from the era when being good at kungfu guaranteed global supremacy. You remember when the world was ruled by kungfu guys, right? Complicating Roberts' already goofy plan is the fact that the original DOA founder's daughter, Helena, is an aspiring DOA combatant herself and is beginning to suspect Roberts is up to something her father wouldn't have approved of. Oh, and there's Katsumi's missing brother. In between that nonsense and all the awful dialog are a whole bunch of choppy fights of varying quality, a game of volleyball, and well, that's pretty much it. DOA has absolutely no surprises to offer even the most easily surprised viewer. But does that mean this movie is as awful as it sounds? Of course. And does that mean that it's as great as it is awful? You betcha. The script, such as it is, comes to us courtesy of a trio of writers who actually have, if not a respectable track record writing good action films, then at least a modest record writing halfways decent action films. J.F. Lawton scripted two of the better Steven Seagal films (as odd as that statement may seem to some), Under Seige and Under Seige II, as well as the cult film spoof Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death. His big gig, however (besides writing Pretty Woman, but what does that have to do with us?), was as a regular writer for the goofy television series VIP, in which a group of hot chicks run a private investigation service. And when you realize that was one of Lawton's former jobs, the entire look and feel of DOA makes perfect, predictable sense. with a few tweaks here and there, this really could pass as a VIP movie, right down to the three-letter title. Lawton worked on more serious action films like The Hunted starring Joan Chen and Christopher Lambert fighting ninjas, and he worked on goofier action movies, like the Damon Wayans superhero spoof misfire Blankman. So you can pretty much see where the script for DOA came from. Script contributors Seth and Adam Gross were writers for Bill Nye, the Science Guy. I guess they came up with Eric Roberts' crazy science scheme, although i think the sheer goofiness of it all makes it more of a Beakman thing, really.
Cory Yuen's direction is a little uninspired compared to other efforts, though he puts his craft to good use in filming the ladies (Yuen has previous experience with cheesecake kungfu thanks to his turn in the director's seat of Women on the Run, which features some rather interesting, um, kung-nude). DOA lacks the slick polish of So Close, though Yuen is still adept at making cheap films look flashy. But even though the cinematography may be lacking, he misses no opportunity to randomly cut to a shot of someone's ass or cleavage, so he's not totally off his game here. And while Yuen is used to making non martial artists look like martial artists, he really has his work cut out for him in this movie. Aoki and Valance seem to possess almost no athletic ability whatsoever, and so to pass them off as fighters, Yuen relies on gravity-defying wirework and jumpy editing, as well as a dollop of CGI. He does the most he can with what little he has, but no one is going to be mistaking these gals for legitimate fighters. Even Hsu Chi was more believable. Jamie Pressly fares better largely because she has a pretty awesomely athletic build and looks like she really could deliver some punches and kicks and make you feel them. There's a reason why she's the one out of all these women who went on to have the biggest career. She's adept at both the job of acting and the job of looking good in the fight scenes. Sho Kosugi, errr, Kane Kosugi gets to have one fight scene all to himself, which ends up being the only fight scene that looks anything like vintage Cory Yuen, since this is a guy who knows martial arts fighting a bunch of stuntmen. But even though this fight is pretty good, the award for best fight scene has to go to the one between Valance and Sarah Carter, who plays Helena. And that's because that fight is between two sexy chicks in bikinis. On the beach. In the rain. In slow motion. Yuen manages to wring a few other choice action sequences from a game but largely incapable cast. His skill alone is what elevates this film above the level of, say, an Andy Sidaris action film. Aoki and purple-wig wearing Malthe have a decent wirefu match-up in a bamboo forest, which many people have pegged as a cheap knock-off of the bamboo forest fight in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, even though it has more in common with the same type of scene as presented in Andrew Lau's Stormriders. The finale against a super-powered Eric Roberts (who's acting suggests that if you asked him today, he might not even be aware of the fact that he ever even appeared in this film) isn't exactly solid fight choreography, but it's still funny and exciting because, well hell, it's Eric Roberts. What the hell is even going on? And by this point, Yuen has resorted to his trademark jettisoning of any and all semblances of logic or reality, and believe me when I say that semblances of logic and reality are the last thing a movie like this needs. Labels: Director: Cory Yuen Kwai, Martial Arts: Kungfu, Martial Arts: Ninjas, Stars: Kane Kosugi, Year: 2006 posted by Keith at 2:31 PM | 17 Comments Tuesday, December 19, 2006Commando
Digg this article. 1988, India. Starring Mithun Chakraborty, Mandakini, Hemant Birje, Kim, Danny Denzongpa, Shakti Kapoor, Amrish Puri, Asrani, Satish Shah, Om Shivpuri, Dalip Tahil, Sarla Yeolekar. Written and directed by Babbar Subhash. Buy it from IndiaWeekly.
Put succinctly, I was born to watch this movie. Very recently, I was having a conversation on A Hollowed-Out Volcano: The Teleport City Discussion Forums (if you aren't registered and regularly posting, what's wrong with you?) with our good friend Beth of Beth Loves Bollywood (which you should also be reading -- I mean, what else do you have to do all day at work?) that resulted in me positing that there was no way Bollywood got out of the 1980s without making at least one ninja movie. It's inconceivable that Bollywood, a film industry just as giddy about exploiting trends as any other country's film industry, didn't latch on to the explosion of ninja popularity that made the 1980s such a glorious time to be a bad film fan. Despite the Japanese origins of the ninja (for a brief summary, you should see our review of Enter the Ninja), most of the ninja movies that came out in the 1980s were made in Hong Kong or the United States, with many of the Hong Kong productions being piecemeal Frankenstein monsters created from the bits and pieces of other movies spliced with newly shot footage (usually from Italy or The Philippines) of white guys in red and yellow ninja uniforms with headbands that say "Ninja" on them, courtesy of the holy trinity of cut-rate ninja exploitation production: Thomas Tang, Godfrey Ho, and Joseph Lai.
But it's not like other countries didn't get in on the good ninja action. Japan threw a few movies into the mix, usually featuring Hiroyuki Sanada, as did plenty of other countries. There was no way, I declared with a thump of my fist on the stained surface of my large oaken desk, that India didn't make a ninja movie. No sooner did I post this declaration than Beth fired back with an almost immediate -- and most welcome -- link she'd turned up to a review on (another highly recommended website) Cinema Strikes Back of a film called Commando. Now, not only is Commando (not to be confused with Commando) a Bollywood ninja film, it's a Bollywood ninja film from the same cast and crew who brought you Disco Dancer. I nearly fell out of my seat with joy as I looked at a series of screencaps in which our hero Jimmy (he's got a different name in this movie, but he'll always be Jimmy to me) faces down legions of black-clad ninjas, including the leader of the Ninja clan, who is actually named Ninja. Executing the fastest and most accurate typing job I've ever pulled off, I was on the IndaWeekly website, handing over my credit card number, then immediately walking over to my mailbox and wondering with anger and frustration why the DVD of Commando I order two minutes prior wasn't yet in my trembling, impatient hands. Beth, apparently, did the same.
Beth and I got our DVDs at about the same time, and ended up watching the movie on the same day, albeit while separated by half the width of the continental United States. Still, there's no gulf so wide that it can't be bridged by a guy in a V-shaped red Michael Jackson vest fighting a ninja named Ninja. Beth got her review posted fairly quickly (you can and should read it here). She and I had fairly different reactions to it, which will come up in this review as I think they illustrate a fundamental element that will go into either loving or hating this film. Predictably enough, I was sitting on my hands in an attempt not to get up and run around the room while hooting with joy as I watched Commando -- keeping in mind that I tend to run around in circles and hoot at even the most trifling of things. It is, I feel, a trait most becoming in a grown and cultured man who aspires to one day be a member of either the idle rich, the landed gentry, or one of those rings of decadent, depraved, and jaded sexy Satanists. If I can combine all three into one thoroughly debauched life involving me drinking heavily while reclining with nude women on the front deck of a yacht bound for a private island of hedonism and madness in the Caribbean, so much the better. And with any luck, when we're not in the throes of some drunken, orgiastic madness, we'll be below decks in the posh space-age cabin watching Commando on a 52-inch plasma screen television that rises up out of the floor with the touch of a button.
See, I have a very detailed "five-year plan." Actualizing it is proving somewhat difficult, unfortunately. There's no Seven Habits of Highly Effective People geared toward people with my peculiar aspirations. Commando tells the story of young Chandu, who's name changes in the subtitles to Chander about halfway through the movie. Either way, I'm simply calling him Commando, in honor of his arch nemesis being named Ninja. The movie begins when Commando is but a boy, and his father is the commando of the family, prone to taking his young son out on early morning workouts that involve singing, at least half a dozen different track suits, running, judo, horsing around on the playground, karate, riding horses on the beach, riding bikes, shooting rifles, getting punched repeatedly in the face by his father, and doing push-ups that look less like push-ups and more like a little kid making sweet, sweet love to the ground. Perhaps this is an allegory for young Chandu's love for Mother India, but I don't think it's a proper way for a boy to behave toward his mother. So let's just chalk it up to appalling push-up form and leave it at that. Commando's father is played by some doughy guy I thought at first was Mithun Chakraborty, Mithun Chakraborty, known to the world primarily as Jimmy, the king of disco from Disco Dancer. Upon closer inspection, though, I think it's justs ome doughy middle aged guy, which doesn't speak well of Mithun. As soon as they off Commando's father, however, Commando himself is played by Mithun.
Commando's father is killed protecting Indira Ghandi from a quartet of assassins wielding sparkler guns, one of whom happens to be Bob Christo, who was "International Hitman" in Disco Dancer. Somewhere in the world, there is a factory that produces Bob Christos, because every Asian country seems to have a guy that looks almost exactly like him (maybe it's his son or father) playing exactly the same role. Commando was made in 1988, so presumably the events that happen later in the film are set in 1988. Since Commando is young when his father is killed, we have to assume at least a dozen years or more pass between this and the rest of the movie, which would put the event somewhere in the middle of the 1970s. Yet Bob Christo is wearing a stylish Ocean Pacific baseball cap (which, Beth pointed out to me, he wears in at least one other movie as well). I guess the man was just a trend-setter, or possibly a time traveler. Anyway, I always expected that assassins gunning for major political figures would somehow dress in something cooler than a blazer and an OP baseball cap.
But whatever, Bob Christo is too awesome for me to judge. He is to India what Al Leong is to America. He was born in Australia and worked as a civil engineer, set builder, and model up until 1980, when he was in Mumbai awaiting the approval of a work visa. He'd gone to Mumbai to pass the time while the paperwork crawled through official channels, and remembering an article he'd read about the Indian film industry, decided he would try and meet Indian actress Parveen Babi (Deewar, Shaan, and Abdullah, among many others). When he somehow stumbled into the part of a heavy in the 1980 film Abdullah, which also starred Raj Kapoor and Zeenat Aman. Christo's fate was sealed. He is listed as appearing as "The Magician," which makes good sense for a guy with a shaved head and pointy goatee. From there, Christo's stock as the go-to evil white henchman soared, and he appeared in at least dozens -- and quite possibly hundreds (the online edition of The Hindu national newspaper pegs the number at 230) -- of roles between 1980 and 2003, before retiring to become a yoga instructor. So if you are ever at the Golden Palms Spa in Bangalore, be sure to stop by for a session so the guy who dusted it up with everyone from Mithun and Amitabh can stretch you a bit.
Anyway, when Commando grows up, he becomes what this movie calls a commando, though apparently the discipline and structure of the Indian commando squads is considerably more lax than what I might have thought. He also works out now while wearing acid washed jeans, suspenders, and a red tank top, which might explain why he isn't really in that good shape. Mithun is assigned to the garrison in charge of security at a munitions factory that is frequently the target of terrorists from "a neighboring country," which is Hindi for "Pakistan." Here, we get plenty of examples of the worst security detail in the history of security details, even worse than when the movie The Soldier moved a vat of weapons-grade plutonium, clearly marked "Weapons-Grade Plutonium," on the back of a flatbed truck with only one guard and one county cop car to watch over it. Security is so bad at this weapons factory that no one even notices that the acting manager and the head of security are both in league with the dastardly terrorist and disco mogul (they are eee-vil discos) Mr. Marcelloni, played by the always-welcome Amrish Puri, doing his best "crazy eyes" for this film and decked out in attire that seems to have been purloined from the wardrobe of Captain Harlock, where Harlock had left it for a long time on account of his judging the outfits to be "a little too flamboyant and foppish." You'd think that the factory in charge of manufacturing most of the weapons for the Indian government would be under closer scrutinization, but no one seems to pay that much attention, and the commandos there all seem to be mercenaries rather than actual members of the army.
Marcelloni's evil plan involves stealing munitions from the plant so he can give them to terrorist cells that will use them in ways that will incite Indian-on-Indian violence and drive a wedge between the Muslim and Hindu populations of Hindustan. To accomplish this nefarious scheme, he has employed the assistance of Ninja, who runs a ninja training camp where the ninjas swing on monkey bars and jump on trampolines. Considering that the entire idea behind ninjas is that they should seamlessly blend into their surroundings, having a bunch of guys in the recognizable black outfits, masks, and hoods probably isn't going to help them mix with the locals. But then I guess a decked-out ninja in India isn't going to be any more or less conspicuous than the same in downtown Los Angeles. Commando suspects that something is up, but he is stymied by management, which means this is one of the first films to feature a highly skilled commando who is constantly hamstrung by a middle manager in a comfy sweater. If this was Arnold Schwarzenegger's commando, he would have just thrown a saw blade at the guy's head, chopping off the top of his skull and affording Arnold the chance to say something probably involving "the top of your head." But Commando is more polite, so he simply accepts the abuse while attempting to woo the daughter (Asha, played by Mandakini) of the plant owner (played by Om Shivpuri, who we last saw hassling Mithrun as the evil Oberoi in Disco Dancer).
This all sounds pretty complicated, but by Bollywood standards, that's a straight-forward plot, and before too long, Commando is part of a convoy that gets attacked by Ninja and his ninjas. Although the head of security orders his commandos not to resist (what's the point of armed commandos, then?), Commando disobeys and whups out some serious kungfu fury against the ninjas. I don't know why no one else questioned the fact that the head of security would order the armed guards to lay down their weapons and do whatever the ninjas say, but that's just life in the world of Commando. Asha is also along for the ride, because the promise of terrorists and horrible death is more than she can bear to let pass her by. Although she describes herself as a "dangerous woman," her danger seems to manifest itself primarily through screaming, though she does have pretty miraculous powers that allow her to survive a fiery car crash without a scratch, as well as allowing her to appear barefoot in one shot and wearing shoes in the next. This is a pretty damn good fight scene. It was also pretty good the first time I saw it, in American Ninja. You might think that American Ninja is a little low on the food chain to have people ripping off entire scenes, but you would be wrong. You could take this whole sequence, hold the film negative up against the American Ninja negative, and everything in every frame would match save for the darkness of the hero's skin. Fight choreography in Bollywood films has always been, let's say, bad. Even modern films have pretty wretched fight choreography (I recently watched Dhoom and was stunned by how awful the fight scenes were in such a high-profile film). I don't know why India never hired away all the quality Hong Kong talent the way the United States did. By Bollywood standards though, the martial arts in Commando are pretty good, and they manage to be on par with at least the lower end of the Hong Kong spectrum from the early 80s. Plus, Commando uses one of those four-pronged tire irons (there must be a word for those) as a throwing star!
Commando and Asha are forced by ninja pursuit to flee, only defeating the ninjas by jumping off a small cliff into a river. The ninjas are worried about getting their outfits wet or causing their shuriken to rust or something so they call off the pursuit. Commando and Asha end up either in Pakistan or China. It's hard to tell which. I think it's China, with lots of Indian guys wearing fake pointy Chinese eyebrows and Fu Manchu mustaches. Marcelloni's men pursue Commando and Asha, until our heroic duo enlist the aide of a "hilarious" fat guy who, for some reason, is living in the wilds of China where no foreign person would have ever been allowed to settle by the communist government. He also loves Asha Bhosle and Kishore Kumar and mistakes our heroes for the popular Hindi film music duo, leading to him agreeing to help them escape via use of his antique car that, for reasons no one will ever bother to explain, is equipped with James Bond gadgets like oil slicks and smoke screens. And, umm, the ability to fly. All right, let's pause and take a breather. I know I've lapsed into plot summary, which I try not to do, but this is a special case since there's just so much ridiculously crazy shit in this movie. So far, you have ninjas, including one named Ninja; you have the number one most vital weapons plant in India staffed at the management level almost entirely by terrorists; you have a fat guy with a flying car, fake Chinese peasants, cobra attacks, automotive parts shurikens, kungfu, and a criminal lack of even the most basic security measures taken to safeguard India's cache of weapons. You have a villain in what looks like a holiday sweater, a villain in a sparkling "queen of the fops" get-up, and a villain with an amazing pompadour mullet. And standing between them and the realization of all their evil plans is Commando, doing his best to suck it in and look like he didn't pack on twenty pounds in between Disco Dancer and this.
But wait, there's more! As punishment for disobeying the direct order not to do what he was employed to do (fight ninjas), Commando is assigned to deliver another cache of weapons. Alone. To some random warehouse. Does no one question any of this? Isn't Sonny Deol out there somewhere going, "You call this commando work?" Needless to say, the warehouse is crawling with ninjas, and Commando must fight his way through them while someone attempts to steal the weapons truck, leading to a chase scene that is almost identical to the one where Indiana Jones chases the truck with the Ark of the Covenant in it. Not one, but two fruit stands get knocked over! The gist of everything is that Marcelloni wants to frame Commando as a traitor, steal some weapons, and then assassinate the Indian prime minister. It turns out that Marcelloni, Ninja, and the current head of factory security were the other people who tried to kill Indira Ghandi way back when and succeeded instead in killing Commando's dad. In order to force the factory owner to go along with the plan, Marcelloni kidnaps Asha and spirits her away to a sprawling lair atop a Himalayan mountain. Now it's up to Commando and one other guy to sneak across the border, storm the compound, rescue Asha, kill everyone involved in the terrorist organization, and then foil Ninja's attempt to kill the prime minister. You'd think at this point someone would alert the Army or something, but whatever. To help Commando, he is put in contact with a female secret agent who has infiltrated the terrorist organization disguised as -- you guessed it -- a dancer. If Bollywood film has taught me anything it's that all dastardly Pakistani terrorist organizations make a habit of hiring Indian dancers to amuse them. The finale lacks ninja action, but it makes up for it with plenty of other insane stuff cribbed from James Bond movies, or possibly from Where Eagles Dare. Clad in matching, padded red vinyl vests, Commando and his friend Dilher Singh parachute in while just holding on to the straps of the parachute rather than actually wearing it, scale the walls of the fortress (which is as much Piz Gloria from On Her Majesty's Secret Service as it is the Nazi castle from Where Eagles Dare), hook up with spy Zum Zum (played by Kim, who was last seen here as the love interest in Disco Dancer), and lay waste to the entire compound, including holding a room full of conspirators (most of whom seem to be unarmed) at gunpoint, then mowing them down gleefully with a rain of machine gun fire. Schwarzenegger's commando would be proud. Then everyone heads outside for a wild showdown in and on top of one of those cable cars that can't be placed in a spy film without someone having a fight in and on top of them.
This is some good stuff, and I savored every second of it. Beth, however, didn't react the same way, and here in lies the difference between our two opinions. Her disappointment stemmed from the fact that, as far as Bollywood films go, this wasn't very Bollywood. It was drab, lacked wild costumes, and had only a few musical numbers, all of which were exceptional only for how dreadful they were. These are all valid criticisms. If you go in looking for the glee, color, and reckless joy de vivre most people expect from a Bollywood film, you are going to be disappointed. I, on the other hand, was approaching the film from a decidedly different vantage point. When I first started reviewing some anime feature films, I said that what might make me different from other reviewers of similar fare is that I wasn't reviewing the films as anime per se but rather as members of larger genres (action, espionage, martial arts, scifi, etc) that include both animated and live-action fare. I come from a varied cult film background and don't really specialize in any single type. As such, I tend to see any one film as part of the overall landscape of cult films, rather than as "anime" or as "Bollywood." When I went into Commando, then, my point of reference was not other Bollywood films as much as it was crappy ninja films from Hong Kong or Golan and Globus' Cannon Film Studio. My expectations for Commando came from these films rather than other Bollywood films that didn't feature ninjas, and my appreciation for Commando comes from my appreciation of the aforementioned films. Commando may not be a good film for fans of Bollywood specifically, but for fans of revenge of the Ninja or any number of those godawful Tang/Ho/Lai productions like Ninja Phantom Heroes, Commando is going to put you on cloud nine.
For starters, there's our hero. It's only been five years in between his appearance in Disco Dancer and his appearance in Commando, but Mithrun looks like he's aged twenty years. His face is starting to sag, the bags and black circles under his eyes are even more prominent than they were in Disco Dancer, and he looks to have packed on plenty of extra pounds. Someone was letting his mom feed him by hand a little too often. Maybe that gut he keeps unsuccessfully trying to suck in is just extra emergency rations, or maybe it's so big because that's where he keeps the burning fire of his pride and patriotism for India. Whatever the case, he's not in the best shape. Funny thing is, if he'd grown a thick mustache, I would have accepted the extra pounds without a second thought. I expect chubby guys with mustaches to be saving both India and the Philippines. But when a guy doesn't have a mustache, for some reason I can't explain, I expect him to be better built if he wants to save the country. Mithrun's sole contribution to the craft of acting in Commando is a facial expression that hovers somewhere between befuddled and constipated. Who cares, though, because he gets to shoot rocket launchers, get in sword fights, leap over cars, and do kungfu. Despite his rather "tater skins and beer" physique, he pulls off the action scenes pretty well. Opposing him is Amrish Puri as Marcelloni, making googly eyes and wearing fabulous majorette jackets. Western fans may not recognize the fact, but they know Puri best for his role as the wicked cult priest in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Sadly, he doesn't pull Commando's heart out and show it to him in this movie, but since there are ninjas and flying antique cars, we'll let that pass. Puri is always a dependable bad guy, and whatever Mithrun lacks in charisma or presence is more than made up for by Puri's eye-rolling, scenery-chewing hamfest of an acting job. Now this is how you play a villain, all bellowing and fist-pounding and letting loose with the, "Mwaa-ha-ha!" Without a doubt, this man is my all-time favorite Bollywood villain actor (just wait 'til we get to him in Mr. India, where his acting is even more sublime). The henchmen and supporting cast are all solid old India hands. I thought at first that the evil middle manager in a sweater was played by the same guy who played Sam, the evil king of disco in Disco Dancer. But I guess the mustaches confused me, because Sam was played by a dude named Karan Razdan, who had practically no career in Indian cinema (considering the average career seems to consist of like two hundred films). Lately, however, he seems to have mounted a bit of a comeback as a director and writer. Unfortunately, the evil middle manager Mr. Bhalla is played by a guy named Dalip Tahil, who doesn't look a whole lot like Karan Razdan once you remove the moustaches. But whatever. I'm still going to pretend that the evil disco king eventually grew up and became a facilitator for terrorists. None of this changes the fact that, while Amrish Puri is the main villain, Tahil's odious Mr. Bhalla is the bad guy you can really hate. After all, terrorist masterminds in Freddie Mercury jackets are sort of exotic, but we can all relate to having a boss who's a prick. Unfortunately, we can't all go out and commando his ass with rocket launchers and ninjas. Actually, despite all the exotic tools of death on display in this film, Bhalla is apparently killed by falling into a pool. As the female lead, Mandakini has very little to do other than smile, look cute, and scream in fear. It seemed like they were going to set her up to be a Zeenat Aman style bad-ass, but all she ever ended up doing was hanging around other people who did all the blowing up of bad guys. She is cute, though, and I look forward to seeing her again in Dance Dance, from the same people who brought you Commando and Disco Dancer, only with breakdancing. More active but in a much smaller role is Kim as Zum Zum, who like in Disco Dancer, plays a woman who knew Mithrun as a child and grows up to encounter him again. This time, it's because her father was killed alongside his father in that failed assassination attempt, causing her to become a spy while Mithrun became Commando. As is always the case in Indian film, she is undercover as a dancer, something they do almost as often as female cops in America have to go undercover as strippers or prostitutes. Kim performs well, though her dancing is questionable (seriously -- The Robot?) and I miss her shiny gold go-go boots.
Rounding out the cast from Disco Dancer is the always-dependable Om Shivpuri as Asha's father. He doesn't really have much to do in this film other than say, "I will never betray my country!" while looking indignant, but he's a welcome addition to the cast never the less. Hemant Birje has a role as Dilher Singh, Commando's friend and apparently the only other member of their elite force who can ever go into action. He's not good for much until he starts blowing things up during the finale. Oh yeah -- Commando also has a mom who goes insane when her husband is killed, and spends the movie rocking back and forth in a mental hospital until the end, when for some completely unexplained reason, she is in attendance at the conference where Ninja plans to kill the prime minister. All of this brings us finally to the mysterious Ninja, played by a guy named Danny Denzongpa. Denzongpa has an interesting career that began in the Army, then led him a variety of small roles, usually as a villain, before he was cast in the role as the lead heavy in Sholay. Unfortunately, a conflict of schedules required him to bow out of that film, and the part went to Amjad Khan instead, who was made an instant mega superstar as a result. Still, it's not like Denzongpa had a bad career despite starring in films like Commando. He's still acting regularly and enjoys a wide degree of respect and acclaim. Plus, he's an accomplished singer, having performed numbers along with Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar, and Mohammed Rafi, presumably while they were all sitting in a flying car piloted by a giggling, fat white guy. As Ninja, he looks convincing. At first, with my poor eyesight and his ninja outfit, I thought they'd gone and cast an actual Japanese actor in the role of Ninja, because he was looking sort of like Tadashi Yamashita back when he was rocking the luscious mane of hair and a mustache. Mustaches have really been throwing me off in this movie. He hardly has any lines other than, "Hello, I am Ninja," but he looks good in his red ninja outfit and performs well in the fight scenes, and that's all we can ask. Commando comes to us courtesy of writer-director Babbar Subhash, India's one-man answer to Cannon Films. He did not write, direct, or produce a whole lot during his career, but what little he did do is pure exploitation film gold. Besides Commando and Disco Dancer, the man gave us the aforementioned Dance Dance (which stars Mithun Chakraborty, Om Shivpuri, Amrish Puri, Dalip Tahil, and Mandakini) as well as The Adventures of Tarzan, a Bollywood take on Edgar Rice Burroughs' lord of the apes, which also starred Hemant Birje, Om Shivpuri, and Dalip Tahil. So basically, the man had a core crew with whom he worked on most of his films, and the results were almost always completely bonkers. He's a pretty bad director, but he gets the job done in that sort of crude and awkward way one expects from low-budget action exploitation directors from the 1970s. There are bad edits, poorly framed shots, and other technical problems, but anyone whose been watching similar films from other countries will be familiar and perhaps even comforted by the workmanlike barely-competent direction. Additionally, Bappi Lahiri did the music for almost all the films, and his work is nothing if not horrible. Although I applaud his various hits in Disco Dancer, including that disco love theme to Krishna and the one that used the chorus of "Video Killed the Radio Star," his music in Commando is decidedly less memorable. In fact, for the most part it's downright awful. The only musical highlight in the entire film is the fact that any time someone leaps into action, they steal the score from Star Wars. This may throw some people off, but if you've watched enough old kungfu films, you'll realize just how often music from Star Wars gets appropriated.
The dancing in Commando is as inspired as the music, and this is one of the few times I've given in to the temptation to skip ahead a bit. The musical numbers lack all of the color, delirium, and pageantry one expects from a Bollywood musical number and instead feature a chick walking around while some guys in fatigues lounge about in the background. Luckily, there are only four of them. Commando and Asha have a musical love number set against the majestic backdrop of the Himalayas, except the song is awful, they spend most of their time falling down, and the Himalayas are actually foothills with mountaintops drawn awkwardly onto them in post-production. They also have a dance at her birthday, then Commando dances with Zum Zum in the only halfways entertaining musical number, seeing as it contains people doing The Robot and there's a shirtless guy in hot pants and a tie for no real reason. And then there's the number based around them escaping from China or wherever the hell they were supposed to be. It's only sort of a musical number, really, as the focus is far less on the stupid song and more on the fat guy's magical car that can shoot fire and transform into a toy. The opening is sort of a musical number, but I count that more as a training montage. And the evil manager and Asha visit an evil disco owned by the evil Mancelloni, but that only lasts a minute. After the candy-colored madness of Disco Dancer, it's all sort of a let-down. I was really hoping the ninjas would get involved in at least one musical number. No dice. But like I said, I didn't go into Commando hoping for the usual merry old Bollywood time. I went in hoping to get a hilariously over-the-top ninja movie, and on that level, Commando does not disappoint. By 1988, Hong Kong was well into the New Wave, and performers like Sammo Hung, Jackie Chan, Ching Siu-tung, and Tsui Hark had revolutionized martial arts choreography and filmmaking, elevating it from the depths to which it had fallen when the Shaw Brothers Studio began to falter and creating films that melded breathtaking, revolutionary action and stunt choreography with world-class direction and production values. Commando would not find any company among these films. However, if you set the time machine back a decade or so -- which seems to come with the territory when you're dealing with a Mithrun film -- Commando clicks nicely into place alongside solid 1970s kungfu fare. The energy, writing, and stunts are all way better than what you get in those Tang/Lai/Ho abominations I so dearly love -- which, if you're only familiar with Commando and the quality of filmmaking on display therein, should serve as warning for you never to wander into the fertile, ninja-and-manure-covered fields of Godfrey Ho, Thomas Tang, and Joseph Lai. Commando boasts a lot of action, both armed and unarmed, and the ninjas show up for three scenes of pure gold. The first is simply a glimpse of them at their training academy, which is the same training academy ninjas seem to have no matter which country made the movie. Lots of rope swings, trampolines, monkey bars, and stuff like that. If you saw that now-famous video clip of Al Quaeda guys in hoods at their training camp, you know what a ninja training camp look like. At least it makes sense for ninjas. After all, they are frequently swinging around and scaling walls and whatnot. I never did understand what value Al Quaeda guys were suppose to get from monkey bars and jumping over that wall.
The other two scenes are choice fights in which ninja mayhem reigns supreme and in full glory. You'll not find finer ninja action this side of Sho Kosugi, though I suspect that the real inspiration for this film was Michael Dudikoff's American Ninja. In fact, as odd as it may seem, it is this film's similarity in places to American Ninja that make it uniquely Indian among most ninja movies. Ninjas in the 80s were often cast as terrorists or drug runners or gun smugglers. Whatever the popular crime of the week happened to be. And almost always, the motivation of the hero came from one of two things: either he fought the ninjas in the name of revenge (pretty much all Sho Kosugi movies) for the ninjas or someone else killing a loved one, or he fought the ninja to protect the sacred secrets of ninjitsu (a bunch of those Lai/Tang/Ho films). But Commando is motivated by something rarely seen in a ninja film: patriotism. Once again, we have an Indian action film in which the righteous and noble Indian hero must defend his motherland from the evil Pakistanis...err, I mean a neighboring country. Commando is very explicit in stating that Muslims are not the enemy, as Indian Muslims are as awesome as their Hindu neighbors, and instead that it's Pakistan in particular that is responsible for everything awful in the world. It's really no different than the equally jingoistic American films from the same era, which saw the Russians as being so troublesome that we eventually had to send Rocky over there to lift up an ox cart and run through the snow. Commando is serious about his patriotism, though. As a young boy, he pauses to salute the Indian flag and do flips off an Indian army recruitment billboard. Initially, his opposition to the ninjas is purely political and patriotic. Luckily, this being a ninja movie, he like the American Ninja, eventually discovers ample reasons to make the fight personal. If only Commando, American Ninja, and Sho Kosugi could team up, the world would be free of all problems. Never mind that these ninjas are as noisy as a herd of elephants and couldn't possibly sneak up on anyone. Never mind that their swords look to be some weird amalgamation of katana and Indian style saber. All that matters is that they backflip all over the place and go nuts. In addition, Commando has several one-on-one fights with Ninja, all pretty good. The fact that Commando logs solid ninja action alongside so much other absolutely bizarre nonsense makes it easily one of the best ninja exploitation films ever made. The musical numbers are lame. The plot is full of holes so big that Commando could drive a truck covered in ninjas through them. Everything is slapdash and cheap looking. The special effects are horrible. But man, who gives a crap about any of that when you have a slightly out-of-shape Mithrun running around in a Michael Jackson vest, fighting a guy in a Captain Harlock jacket and facing off against backflipping ninjas? Plus, Bob Christo rocks the OP baseball cap across the decades. The action in Commando is totally insane, and while it may fail to impress as an example of Bollywood filmmaking as people expect Bollywood filmmaking to be, it is a resounding triumph within the realm of really stupid ninja exploitation films from the 1980s. The choreography isn't in the same league as the best from Hong Kong in the 80s, but it easily keeps pace with American movies and some of the junkier martial arts films of the 1970s. With a movie like Commando, I almost hesitate to review them, because I know I'm going to forget to mention so much of the stuff that goes into making the movie cool. But I guess that leaves room for your own discovery. Of course, I am ultimately a restless man, and already I'm thinking about those Bollywood mummy movies that must be out there, though my next actual challenge is this: the world loved Bruce Lee. India loved Bruce Lee. Hong Kong made tons of cheap, sleazy Bruce Lee rip-off movies. Somewhere out there, someone in Bollywood must have slapped a Bruce Lee wig and a pair of big-ass 1970s sunglasses on someone and tried to pass them off as Bruce Lee. Hell, Mithun was born to play Bruce Lee, at least as much as Danny Lee, Bruce Li, Bruce Le, Bruce Liu, or Brute Lee were. Bollywood Bruce Lee exploitation -- I know you are out there. We know you are out there And we will find you. Labels: Bollywood, Director: Babbar Subhash, Espionage, Martial Arts: Ninjas, Musicals, Stars: Amrish Puri, Stars: Danny Denzongpa, Stars: Mithun Chakraborty, Year: 1988 posted by Keith at 11:45 PM | 10 Comments Friday, December 20, 2002The Octagon
1980, United States. Starring Chuck Norris, Karen Carlson, Lee Van Cleef, Art Hindle, Carol Bagdasarian, Tadashi Yamashita, Kim Lankford, Larry D. Mann, Kurt Grayson, Richard Norton, Yuki Shimoda, Redmond Gleeson, Alan Chappuis, Brian Libby, Ken Gibbel. Directed by Eric Karson.
Chuck Norris - say the name. Don't fear it. Embrace Chuck Norris. Hold him in your arms like a dear, dear friend. Rub your palms gently over the wookie-thick pelt on his shoulders and chest. Then grimace as he delivers a devastating spin-kick to your head because you were in there feeling him up. Bruce Lee may have been able to yank out a handful of Chuck Norris chest hair and blow it in his face, but you, my friend, are no Bruce Lee. For better or for worse Chuck Norris and his big bushy 1970s mustache will forever be the face of the American martial arts film. It's not because his films were any good so much as it is the simple fact that he was there and he never went away. Guys like Jim Kelly and Don Knotts simply faded into the background, while Van Damme and Steven Seagal were relegated to the rows of direct-to-video fare when audiences finally caught on that there was no real reason to be watching On Deadly Ground when you could watch Jackie Chan instead. By all means, Norris should have joined one of these two groups by now, but like an agile cat, he manages to bend and twist and avoid the arrows, keeping himself just above the ranks of the fallen. Why? Part of it could simply be that he played his cards right. When the time came, he went to television and starting kicking ass in the name of the Republic of Texas. Part of it could be that he's basically a nice, mellow guy in real life while Van Damme and Seagal have raging egos and attitudes. I mean, Chuck is just this laid back cowboy who happens to be able to beat you within an inch of your life. It's sort of like getting your ass kicked by John Denver. You really can't help but like the man even if you don't like the movies. Part of it may be that Chuck never really aimed to be a superstar, and so his decline was less noticeable. Most likely, it's all these things and more. There's just something cool about Chuck Norris. He's that country uncle who shows up at family reunions and seems kind of shy and nerdy until you catch him out back splitting logs with his bare hands as he mulls over an offer to endorse a brand of karate stretch jeans that will be advertised in Inside Kungfu for the next twenty years alongside the "Bruce Lee-style yellow track suit." He's aided greatly by the fact that he's not an asshole, not to mention the fact that he is also one of the true legitimate bad-asses in the world of martial arts movies. While Van Damme was learning to do dance moves and stretches, Chuck Norris was beating people senseless in the name of inner peace in a variety of national and international fighting tournaments. Both Bruce Lee and Sammo Hung have remarked that Norris has one of the most powerful spin-kicks in the world, and that his punches are no day at the beach either. Norris got his start in movies thanks to Bruce Lee's many contacts in Hollywood, namely Dean Martin. Martin used Norris as a stunt extra for one of the Matt Helm movies before Norris really made an impact as the boss bad guy in Bruce Lee's classic Way of the Dragon. Their confrontation during the film's finale in the Roman Coliseum is one of the top screen fights in kungfu film history. Bruce wanted to work with Chuck Norris because, unlike most martial arts stars, he was adamant about casting real-life martial artists to fight n his film. Most filmmakers were happy with dancers, gymnasts, or people who could just wave their arms wildly at the camera and tumble around. When Lee got a chance to direct a film, one of the first things he did was set about hiring the best martial artists he could afford. For the film's biggest fight, he turned to Chuck Norris. After making such an impact in that film, where audiences around the globe were wowed by his intense fighting style and abundance of body hair, it was no surprise that people started thinking about casting him in larger roles. His first was as the head heavy in Yellow Faced Tiger, released in the United States as Slaughter in San Francisco. What that role had in common with his role in Way of the Dragon was that it was a Hong Kong film that didn't really require more from Chuck than kicking some ass. His lines can be summed up pretty much as the following: "Hmmm," "Arrrr," and of course, "Ha ha ha ha ha!" When Chuck finally got to start speaking his own language (or any language at all beyond primal grunts and evil laughter), people found that he wasn't really that great an actor. What did they expect? It's not like he was actor. How good at karate are your average actors? Luckily, scripts rarely demanded more from Chuck than his poor man's Clint Eastwood, and when they did, he was wooden but certainly not the worst performer in the world. Not that it mattered. People weren't lining up to see Force of One in hopes of catching some really heart-wrenching scenes of Chuck Norris emoting all over the place. They were, however, hoping for heart-wrenching scenes in the most literal sense. In that category, Norris always delivered. Throughout the 1970s, Norris' fame and onscreen body count grew rapidly. His specialty was the "man of peace driven to extreme measures by evil people," his days as a cackling villain long behind him. Norris' characters were always noble, humble, and generally found of cowboy garb. Folks liked Chuck Norris movies because they identified with him. He was just this normal looking guy: not all that handsome, not all that muscular, but possessed of intense inner strength matched by fists that could shatter brick and bone. He was always the moralist, always the straight guy, always the hero at a time when antiheroes were all the rage. Sure, he butted heads with the higher-ups and rattled a few cages, but that's because there was so much corruption around him. He was just as likely to put cowboy boot to ass on a corrupt politician or police chief as he was coke dealer or robber-baron. While there was no shortage of tough-as-nails heroes for the urban crowd, Norris was one of the few guys out there dealing double-fisted beat-downs in the name of all the rural, small-town guys who talked softly and wore bootcut jeans. He was Billy Jack without the endless scenes of improvisational theater and explanations of the alternative hippie school. The one problem aside from his limited acting range was the limited writing range of whoever was dreaming up those movies. Pretty much every one of them entails Chuck beating up a bunch of small-town thugs or international drug lords employing small-town thugs. Rarely did he face off against other martial artists, which I guess is realistic (how many fights have you seen that bust out into fully choreographed kungfu fights?) but not all that interesting to watch. Uneven pacing and cliché scripts only helped to muddy the waters, keeping most of Chuck's films in the "not good but still enjoyable" range until the 1990s, when he dropped the "but still enjoyable" aspect of his work. In 1980, Chuck Norris made a little film that used what was then a little-known but increasingly popular martial arts legend. The legend was the Ninja, and the movie was The Octagon. The ninja trend would really start rolling a year later with the release of Cannon Films' Enter the Ninja, but Norris beat everyone to the spinning punch when he incorporated the mask-wearing shadow warriors into this not altogether bad little martial arts adventure. Norris plays Scott James - an action hero who has a normal name instead of being named something like "Derek Ice" or "Maximilian Scorpio, Esquire." Scott's just your average Southwestern dude who happens to have a secret Ninja past and a Ninja brother who wants to kill him some day. Scott also has a tendency to allow his thoughts to be broadcast as echoing whispers throughout the entire movie, which gets pretty annoying after about, oh let's say the first time it happens. Call it personal preference, but I really hate the whole "echoing voice-over" thought-bubble thing. It just seems goofy to me, and I can't stand that they always have to make it a whisper. Scott never thinks in a normal voice, just like all those people in Dune thought to themselves in whispers. I tend to think to myself in Patrick Stewart's voice, all booming and commanding. But then I talk, and I sound more like Jerry Lewis. Scott gets tangled up with a militia that trains potential terrorists using Ninja techniques. Watching these would-be thugs get their ninja training reminded me of the year Phillip Holder moved to Gainesville and amused us all with his self-aggrandizing flyers stapled up all over town. Anyone who has ever picked up a copy of Inside Kungfu is no doubt familiar not only with Chuck Norris brand karate jeans (with increased stretchability for when you need to kick a trucker in the head while still lookin' good and not ripping the seat of your pants), but also with (self-proclaimed) Grand Master Phillip Holder, who peppered the magazine with ads hocking his instructional videos. When he moved his global training center to Gainesville, Florida, he put signs up everywhere looking for students who wanted to be trained by "the world's third deadliest man." No one ever explained that title to me. I guess there is some international governing body that hands out "deadliest man" rankings, but that still doesn't explain the exact nature of Holder's claim. Is he the third man to hold the title "world's deadliest man," or is that in the race to be the world's deadliest man, there are two men in the world deadlier than Phillip Holder? Anyway, he crossed over into Octagon territory when he opened a summer camp for "Bodyguard and Ninjitsu Training." I have no doubt that Phillip Holder could hand me my ass on a silver platter, just as I have no doubt that the few beer-swilling, Joe Don Baker looking good ol' boys who attended the Grand Master's ninja summer camp could kick my ass in less time than it would take them to down a can of Red Dog, but let's face it: being able to kick my ass doesn't exactly qualify you for Grand Master status or serve as a major stepping stone on your way to becoming a ninja. I'm guessing that alumnus of the Phillip Holder Ninja Camp (or "Kamp" if you are funny) were about the same as the people graduating from this Octagon thing, meaning they're the type of gang who would get their ass kicked by a single well-trained individual. But Norris is a man of peace, and he doesn't just haul off and kick someone's ass without dragging the decision out for the first two-thirds of the film. Luckily, people keep trying to kill him for no real reason, so he does get to fight a lot in between echoing voice-over thought whispers of him going, "Sakura, could it be you?" as he contemplates the possibility that his old ninja brother is the man behind the terrorist ninja camp. Speaking of terrorist camps, here's a question I've had on my mind since I first saw all that footage of Al Quaeda training facilities with the guys scrambling over ramps and stuff: why do terrorists need to know how to perform well on gymborees? Honestly, I think whenever Osama bin Laden couldn't think of anything more destructive for his thugs to do, he'd just send them out to jump over the bars and swing on the ropes. Are they planning on taking down America by challenging us to a footrace through an obstacle course? Or are they training to win that Gymkata game? One of the women at the terrorist training camp decides this is all a little much, and makes a hasty retreat, eventually coming into contact with Scott (Norris), who has been busy playing games with some rich chick while his best friend grumbles and Lee Van Cleef drifts in and out of the film in an attempt to spur Chuck's character to action or possibly just collect a paycheck. You'd say that Van Cleef was slumming it in b-movie action realm if his filmography wasn't so full of shame. Given that he would later go on to star in the abysmal Master Ninja television series, it's safe to say that this movie is the pinnacle of all things Lee Van Cleef has done involving ninjas. Eventually, the reformed terrorist chick shows her boobs to Chuck Norris and he finally gets off his peace-lovin' ass track down Sakura's ninja camp. The terrorist chick shoots stuff, Lee Van Cleef gets to blow things up, and Chuck Norris has to fight his way through a maze filled with ninja henchmen before facing off against the final ninja henchman (who insists on wearing an elaborate get-up and metal mask even though the training facility is in the middle of the desert in Mexico) and, ultimately, his estranged blood brother. The Octagon takes a lot of flack for "looking dated," which has never hit me as an especially meaningful criticism. It's what people say who can't remember back more than three years. It's not Chuck's fault that fashion in the late 1970s was so abysmal. Luckily for him, cowboy fashion has been the same pretty much since the 1800's, so at least he isn't strutting around in all those plaid flares Sonny Chiba had a tendency to don. That a film looks dated really doesn't bother me or register, most likely because I've been watching film so closely for so long now that I've simply learned to disregard certain trivial things that other people seem to get hung up on. Besides, there's plenty of stuff to complain about in The Octagon without having to dwell on the khaki pantsuits and things like that. First, of course, there's that damn whispering. I go to bed at night, and I hear Chuck Norris whispering in the wind. I'm thinking of recording all his weird echoing whispers and playing them at random intervals during subway rides around town. That would at least afford me some small amount of satisfaction for having to hear ol'Chuck's whisper-thought so much. It seems weird to have to yell "Shut up!" at a guy who isn't actually saying anything. Watching The Octagon is a simulation of what it must feel like to have ESP. Coming out when it did, The Octagon is basically a 1970s action film with a 1980 release date. As such, it suffers from many of that era's shortcomings, which are actually many of the same things that endeared the movies to me. It's needlessly arty in some places, amateurishly crude in others. Flashbacks have a freaky tint to them, and many of the nighttime scenes are poorly lit (or at least poorly transferred from the original negatives). The pacing is also pretty uneven. When there's action a-brewin', it's generally pretty good, but when it comes down to scenes of Chuck Norris engaging in witty banter with Lee Van Cleef or the rich lady, things just grind to a halt. Luckily, the final third of the film dispenses with the dialogue altogether save for the occasional shout of "Sakura!!!" and just makes with the martial arts mayhem. I also don't begrudge Chuck Norris the chance to have a cute girl get naked for him during the film's one short love scene. Given the chance, I'm sure most of us would write ourselves a script that involved some attractive young gal rubbing her boobs against us, or some strapping young cabana boy giving us a cocoa butter rub-down if we happen to be female and not into other women rubbing their boobs against us. But understandable or not, I'm not so into seeing Chuck Norris' carpetlike chest stroked lovingly like someone might pet a furry dog or a sasquatch. I mean, you slide your fingers into that jungle, and there's a chance some of them won't come back out. Action, of course, is what we're here for, and when the movie shuts up long enough, it delivers some solid martial arts fun. Sure, we're not talking Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao, but as far as American martial arts films go, The Octagon has better than average fight scenes. Norris is in good form and this movie has the wisdom to pit him against other martial artists rather than fist-swinging country lugs. While the choreography isn't mind-blowing, it's definitely solid and even believable for the most part. Sakura is played by Japanese karate movie mainstay Tadashi Yamashita, and Richard Norton shows up as a thug, so this movie isn't devoid of martial arts talent. For the most part, fights are well done. I'm sure fans of the wild wire-fu and undercranked nonsense will find the fights sluggish, but since I enjoy the old school even if it's slower and doesn't fly through the treetops, I thought The Octagon's martial arts were pretty enjoyable. As for the ninjas, I'm not quite sure what their deal was. I know that ninja popularity was on the rise as this film was being completed, but none of the ninjas in the movie do anything particularly ninjalike. Sure, they sneak into houses and try to strangle Chuck Norris, but there's no real reason to do masks and cloaks for that. Well, masks maybe, but you don't exactly blend in with the surroundings running around your average Southwestern city in a ninja uniform and cloak. They don't seem to be teaching their students very much, either. Sakura and his sai-weilding ninja right hand man kick dirt at people and do that thing where you teach them a lesson by beating them up, but none of their pupils seems especially accomplished at any point. I wonder if Sakura and his masked pal didn't go back home after a day of watching the recruits screw up and bemoan the sorry state of ninjitsu students these days. Additionally, if the entire idea behind the art of ninjitsu is that you blend in to your surroundings, why would a bunch of Japanese ninjas build their camp in Mexico then strut around the local barrio in their ninja outfits? Mexico is a pretty laid back place, but even the most stereotypical Mexican peasant would be stirred from his siesta by a troupe of ninjas marching down the street. Maybe Sakura just passes his men off as some Cirque du Soliel type of thing. On the acting front - well, you get what you pay for. That Chuck Norris has never been nominated for a "Best Actor" Oscar is no travesty of justice, and he proves that here. He's not bad, per se, but he is stiff. He gives it the ol' college try, and he's better than a lot of the other actors in the genre. Lee Van Cleef is there to pay some bills, but he turns in a decent performance, though half the time exactly what he's even doing is a bit unclear. Yamashida is all action, few words, as is Norton. The rest of the cast - well, let's leave it at the fact that there's a good reason you've probably never heard of most of them before or after this film. Problems aside, The Octagon really isn't such a bad film. It was the first out of the ninja gate, even if Enter the Ninja was more popular, so it gets points for being historically important in that regard (or however historically important low-budget B-movie action films can be). It's certainly better than vast many ninja films that would be released throughout the 1980s, sitting at the top of the heap alongside the likes of Enter the Ninja, Revenge of the Ninja, and Pray for Death. Granted, that's not an especially tall heap, but it's better than nothing. If you're looking for wild ninja action and people disappearing into puffs of purple smoke, your better off with a film like Ninja Hunters. If, however, you appreciate decent low-budget 1970s action films, The Octagon has a lot of fun to offer despite the stop and go pacing and low production values. I'm much happier with a low key film like this than I am overblown, special effects laden crap like we see today. Call me a cranky old redneck with no taste, but I'd much rather see Chuck Norris beating up ninjas in some sandy courtyard than I would ever watch Jet Li do cgi-fu and "bullet time" effects. Labels: Martial Arts: Ninjas, Stars: Chuck Norris, Year: 1979, Year: 1980 posted by Keith at 12:40 AM | 3 Comments Enter the Ninja
1981, United States. Starring Franco Nero, Sho Kosugi, Susan George, Christopher George, Alex Courtney, Zachi Noy, Constantine Gregory, Will Hare. Directed by Menaham Golan.
Golan and Globus. Say the name. It rolls off the tongue with silky smoothness, leaving only the faintest oozing trail of snail-like effluvia in your mouth. Golan and Globus. A name that, along with the banner studio Cannon, means many different things to many different people. None of them are good, but many of them are enjoyable. In the 1980s, the powerhouse production tag team of Menahem Golan and his partner, Yoram Globus, assaulted the world with a seemingly endless stream of cinematic swill that quickly became a staple of my early film-watching life. Nary a trend went unscathed as Cannon Films latched on to one flash in the pan after another, producing as many movies as humanly possible before the trend died out and the next thing came along. We dealt with these gentlemen and their contributions to human society during a review of Treasure of the Four Crowns, the movie that proves you can make an Indiana Jones type adventure without a big budget, big stars, a good story, a good director, or good special effects; it just won't be a very good film. I'd like to say that when I was young and foolish, Cannon Films comprised the vast bulk of what I wanted to see when I was over at my friend's house who had one of those big satellite dishes. The only reason I can't say that is because I'm not exactly young anymore, except when compared to Carl "Oldie" Olson or Young Mr. Grace, and I still love most of the Cannon Films I watched as a wee one. You could chalk it up to nostalgia, or more realistically, you could chalk it up to incredibly immature and undeveloped taste. Finding out that Golan and/or Globus produced a film is enough to send most people heading for the hills with shotgun in tow, ready to board up the windows of their ramshackle cabin and send an assful of lead the way of anyone who approaches them waving a copy of Braddock: Missing in Action III or The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington. Hardened fans of the films that tend to settle closer to the bottom of the barrel greet each Cannon Films release as a treat, albeit a treat not unlike a pack of Good 'n' Plenties. Say what you will, but these guys know exactly what to cram into their films to assure thousands upon thousands of adolescent boys will be going out of their way to borrow them from friends with premium cable channels or to just watch them between the wavy scrambled lines. The vast majority of Cannon productions can be boiled down to two fundamental elements that exist at the very top of the periodic table of bad movie elements: sex and violence. When all else fails, or when you happen to be too lazy to try anything else, a sleazy movie producer can always rely on these enchanted looms to spin cinematic gold (or green, as the case may be) every time. Against our better judgment, it almost always works. Heck, the advertising for Showgirls was one degree shy of just flat out saying, "It's a bad movie, but it's full of tits!" and you know what? People paid to see that. Striptease made a big deal out of the fact that Demi Moore bared her bosoms for the film, and folks flocked to the theaters to catch a glimpse of her nipples, apparently forgetting that she's shown them off in damn near half the films she's ever been in. The only difference is that in About Last Night, they weren't perfectly spherical, gravity-defying orbs similar to Jim Kelley's afro in the 1970s. Golan and Globus productions generally fall somewhere below your average Dino De Laurentiis film but still above your average Roger Corman picture. At least Golan and Globus would spend some money on a movie. They may not pay to fly the crew to Japan, but they'd be more than willing to spring for a few weeks in Manila as long as you worked cheap. From Sylvia Kristel to David and Peter Paul, the steroid-powered twins, the halls of Cannon are filled with the sort of macho heroes and nekkid ladies people demand from their cheap exploitation cinema. When an author by the name of Eric Von Lustbader penned a novel called The Ninja that quickly shot to number one on the New York Times bestseller list and stayed perched atop that pyramid for five months, the boys at Cannon smelled a trend that had been steadily building for the past several months. Genres of film go through popularity cycles, and every seven to ten years, what was popular then becomes popular again. Martial arts movies were due for a return to the big screen, as packed revivals of Bruce Lee's Enter the Dragon had shown throughout 1979. The popularity of The Ninja and the smash 1980 miniseries Shogun starring Richard Chamberlain (who would later work with Cannon Films on King Solomon's Mines and its sequel) and the legendary Toshiro Mifune foretold that this time around, Japan would be the focus rather than China. Like the masters of sneakiness and surprise that they are, ninjas had slowly and quietly been infiltrating the mainstream consciousness of America for quite some time. One of the first non-Asian films to feature a ninja was the 1967 James Bond film You Only Live Twice, during the filming of which the production ruined the ancient, wooden walls of Osaka Castle by throwing real shuriken (throwing stars) into them. Throughout the 1970s, people became more familiar with these mysterious denizens of the shadows when they were featured as the heavies in many a kungfu film. By 1980, the success of The Ninja and Shogun (which also features a ninja or two) opened the doors to the big screen in the form of Chuck Norris's The Octagon, arguably the first of the ninja exploitation films that leapt out of the trees and onto an unsuspecting American public. As they were passed down from one movie to the next, the authenticity of the ninja became warped beyond comprehension. Basic facts were still more or less intact - specifically, that they were highly skilled assassins and masters of disguise - but little else remained true to any historic roots. The ninjas of old got their start round about eleven hundred years ago with two separate mountain clans in central Japan - the Iga and the Koga. Isolated form the greater portion of Japan in much the same way that the people of the American Appalachians were insulated from the United States, the mountain clans developed into legendary farmers, healers, and weather forecaster with a profound respect for the land that lent them their livelihood. It was from these mountain clans, steeped in ancient tradition and religious beliefs, that the ninja would acquire their mystical flavoring. Drawing from the Shinto reverence for nature and the esoteric philosophy of Mikkyo, ninjas came to rely on a belief in secret symbols and sacred words as a way to enhance personal power. The religious aspects of ninjitsu eventually mixed with the martial arts of China, which were carried to Japan by exile warriors seeking asylum after the fall of the T'ang dynasty. The final ingredient in the birth of the Ninja clans was the influence of a sect of people known as the Shugenja, wandering holy men who sought enlightenment through self-imposed physical suffering. They're the sort of guys who would sit naked in the snow or hang off the side of a cliff in order to understand cold or overcome the fear of hanging off the side of a cliff. Through these acts of punishment, the Shugenja would come to understand nature, and in understanding nature would be able to draw power from it. There's really very little that's different from the philosophy of the Shugenja and the philosophy of a mountain man or pioneer. The concepts of "drawing power from an understanding of nature" manifests itself practically as knowing how to stay alive in the woods, knowing what plants and berries you can eat, what certain signs in the weather might imply, things like that. Although approached from a religious frame of mind, the philosophy of the Shugenja and the Ninja is astoundingly practical and down-to-earth. What the sundry warlords of feudal Japan saw in the Ninja were easy targets. Hillbillies who could be taxed and exploited and were too powerless in government to defend themselves. They weren't entirely correct. Their superior knowledge of nature and of wilderness survival made a Ninja a fearsome opponent even for a well-trained samurai. Small groups of Ninja could hold off entire armies simply by employing a greater understanding of the land and how to use it to one's advantage. All that cool looking samurai armor isn't going to do you much good when some bunch of farmers are rolling boulders and logs down on you. Contact with Chinese martial artists helped them develop a fighting skill and tactical sense that was often greater than the commanders of the samurai legions, and it wasn't long before the Ninja clans added political savvy to their repertoire. The manipulated policy to protect their villages and would gleefully promote any ignorant superstition about themselves that kept people nervous and away from their hills. Once again, similarities to the so-called hillbillies of Appalachia abound. In 1603, Tokugawa Ieyasu became the ruler of Japan and ended the bloody era of warring states and petty lords. The new shogun decided he would hire Ninja to be his personal bodyguards. For the most part, members of the Ninja clan stayed out of the mainstream political and military scene, preferring to stick to things that directly affected them and their villages. The allure of money is strong, though, and for some Ninja it was more than enough to lure them out of the mountain forests and valleys and into the halls of the Imperial Castle, newly established in Edo (modern-day Tokyo) instead of it's traditional home in Kyoto. Other Ninja looking for a quick way to make money rented themselves out as spies. Ninja had always been willing to do a little infiltration here and there in order to protect their family and community, and now some of them were putting these skills up for auction to the highest bidder rather than sticking to the tradition of working for and as part of the Ninja community. These are, of course, the Ninja embraced by film and literature. Though noble and definitely interesting, the fact that most Ninjas were farmers and herbalists doesn't necessarily make for rousing tales of action. Few and far between are the people who would see a movie called Furious Blade of the Ninja that was all about a clan of Ninja diligently hoeing the garden and using scythes to clear a patch of land for planting. The Ninja who rented themselves out - the sell-outs, basically - made for cooler stories, and so the renegades and the Ninja in the service of the Tokugawa shogunate became the basis for the bulk of the books and movies that were to come. Unfortunately for the sell-outs, with the Tokugawa era came relative peace throughout Japan. Ninja eventually moved from roles as saboteurs, spies, and assassins to being castle guards, and eventually they came full circle, being relegated to the ranks of palace servants -- most specifically, the gardener. The outlandish notions regarding the Ninja that have become de rigueur in most ninja films evolved directly from a combination of widespread ignorance, propaganda, and creative license. Because the Ninja clans followed a different set of rules than those that governed the samurai lifestyle (ninpo instead of bushido), most of Japan's looked down upon the Ninja as backward hayseeds and uncivilized countryfolk. They were the rednecks of medieval Japan. Part of the resentment toward the Ninja communities also came from the fact that the samurai were generally so unsuccessful at dealing with them. Masters of guerilla warfare - a necessity for a group of poor mountain folk who are vastly outnumbered by well-equipped armies - the Ninja were often able to befuddle even well-trained samurai through their command of the land and understanding of the sneakier aspects of a fight. Defeated samurai decried the Ninja tactics as dishonorable and deceitful; the Ninjas claimed they were fighting the only way practicality would allow. To a samurai lost in the woods, it must have seemed like these backwoods yokels were wielding some sort of magic power. They would appear and vanish without a trace, use every part of nature to their benefit. Combine befuddlement with ego, and a samurai would return home with tail between legs and spin fanciful yarns about how the only reason he was defeated was because the Ninja disappeared into thin air, flew over the treetops, and performed other feats of wizardry. The Ninja clans, in turn, were more than happy to take this hyperbole and run with it. The more people feared them, the less likely people were to come around and stick their nose into the Ninja communities. Because the Ninja were a secretive and insular community, there really wasn't anyone to talk sense into people and refute the claim that Ninjas disappeared into clouds of multicolored smoke or were able to explode into hundreds of tiny ninjas. While most early filmic depictions stuck to the historical facts about the ninjas who became assassins and spies for hire, the farther things moved from their Japanese roots, the more the wild old stories were once again embraced. Before too long, thanks in part to Chinese kungfu films, ninjas were everywhere, often clad in garish neon outfits and doing things like flying over castles and shooting flame out of their hands. By the 1980s, things really got out of hand, and more than a few movies from both sides of the Pacific featured people in wildly colorful ninja outfits running around the streets of modern day cities. Of course, any real ninja would understand the key to performing their job is to blend end and seem nondescript and normal. You don't get very far as a spy if you look like a spy, and there is very little that's nondescript about a guy in metallic red pajamas and a facemask running down the streets of modern-day Duluth while waving a katana over his head. Logic and history didn't really matter of course. What people wanted wasn't historical accuracy; they wanted guys screaming and using weird weapons and wearing hoods. And by 1980, American filmmakers were ready to give it to them. Hot on the heels of The Octagon came Golan and Globus with 1981's Enter the Ninja, the film that really kicked the trend into high gear. Real-life martial arts superstar Mike Stone had this script called Dance Of Death. He'd been shopping it around without much success, and eventually the thing landed on the desk of Menahem Golan. It took Golan a while to read it since he wasn't initially interested in a martial arts movie. The success of The Ninja novel quickly changed his mind, and before long he and Stone were heading down to the Philippines to make a little movie called Enter the Ninja. Stone was set to star, at least until production began. Then all of a sudden, Stone was just the fight choreographer and stunt double for the new star, Italian action star Franco Nero. One look at Nero will explain the sudden change. He oozes ninja. When you think of a ninja, the mental image in your mind is going to be very close to Franco Nero: tall, blond, a little solid in the weight department, and adorned with a thick Maurizio Merli mustache. Stone was baffled, but what the hell? He was getting paid more to work behind the scenes and as a double than he was originally offered to be the star. The one problem that emerges in the film with Stone as Nero's double is that he's not only leaner, he also has a big, dark white guy 'fro while Nero has fairly thin, blond hair. The end result is that one minute you're watching Franco Nero strike a ninja pose, and the next minute you're going, "Is that Screech kicking that guy's ass?" Luckily, most of the action takes place behind the hood and mask of a ninja uniform, so the difference is only obvious in a few scenes. Nero plays Cole, the first Westerner to ever be recognized by a Japanese school of ninjitsu. He gets this recognition by running through a bamboo forest and pretending to kill his ninja brothers and master. He looks resplendent in his bright white ninja uniform, the perfect color for blending in with his lush green background. As a testament to the sophistication of his skill, he manages to bury himself, climb trees, jump off cliffs, and swim in a brackish pond while still keeping his duds sparkling white. Now my friends and I used to do run around like ninjas in the woods fairly regularly, but no one ever flew in from Japan to give us any recognition, I assume because Sho Kosugi was working behind the scenes to prevent us from receiving our due. At least, that's what he does here. Kosugi plays Cole's ninja brother, Hasegawa, who is not as impressed as the master by Cole's ability to sprint through the jungle and pretend to behead people. Hasegawa displays his ninja training prowess by tipping over his tea cup, pounding his fists on the table, and whining, "He is no ninja!" If you've ever been to a friend's birthday party where one kid starts crying, or your friend gets yelled at by his mom in front of everyone, you have a general idea of how this feels for all the other ninjas. They just keep quiet, stare at the table, and pray that the cake comes soon. With his newfound ninja credentials secure, Cole heads to the Philippines to visit his old war buddy, Frank Landers, played by Alex Courtney. Courtney looks like a b-movie version of James Caan. He and his British wife have one of those standard issue pieces of land that some greedy developer wants to buy. They, of course, won't sell, having fallen in love with the simple, rustic life of owning a lavish Filipino plantation house. The greedy businessman, who of course, lounges about his posh high rise office space in a silk robe, employs a variety of ludicrous goons in hopes of strong-arming Frank into selling the land. Leading the goons is Sigfried, a bulbous limping worm of a German stereotype in a white Panama Jack suit (you'll see many of those during the course of the film) and sporting a keen hook hand. Exactly why a man who could best be described as "hamster-like" or "not dissimilar to that Goatman on Saturday Night Live gets to be in charge is a mystery. Movies, especially bad movies, have a tendency to always cast some incredibly greasy little twerp as the leader of the evil thugs. What are they thinking? Fat German weasels who sweat a lot and can't walk are seldom the leader of vicious street toughs, but in movies, gangs always get lead by the goofiest guy imaginable? I mean, what makes a criminal mastermind look at an overweight sweat hog with a bum leg and think, "This is the perfect guy to be my main thug!" Oh sure, he has a hook hand, but his nasal voice and gland problems negate the coolness of steel, and his primary value of a fighter seems to be the ability to stick the occasional surly dock worker in the thigh. Cole quickly becomes entangled in Frank's fight to get rid of the thugs, which in a way is actually in line with ancient Ninja priorities about defending their farms and small rural villages from big city heavies. This could be an accident, though. The script from here on out is pretty much what you would expect. There's a scene of Frank getting drunk and losing hope, followed by a scene of Cole kicking someone's ass. Peppered throughout are scenes of Filipino farmers getting beat up by the lamest looking bunch of thugs you could possibly imagine. Someone apparently employed the cast of Taxi to be the muscle, only they told Tony Danza to stay home. Isn't there a single Filipino who can fight? Here's the thing movies have never understood. They always feature some backwater town full of helpless peasants who get bullied by even the lamest of villains. Try this experiment: go to some small hick town, go to the local bar, and try to start some shit. Walk up to the first guy you see and pour his Red Dog into his lap, then say, "I think you work for me now, asshole." As the six-foot six factory worker with a belt buckle bigger than your head stands up in preparation for pounding your ass into next week, reflect on why it is movies always feature skinny-ass, no-fighting-talent goofballs reigning over entire hick towns like little Hitlers. In my experience, small towns are over the world are pretty much the same, and whether it's Africa or the Philippines, I find it difficult to believe there's not a single Filipino bad-ass who could just strut up and beat the unholy crap out of the sweaty German goatman or the floppy-haired beanpole whose big 1970s mustache weighs more than the rest of him. Trust me. Go to some seedy Filipino bar in some small farming shantytown, start throwing your weight around (possibly while faking a limp and a sniveling German accent) and see if a dozen muscular, tan guys with mustaches, cowboy hats, and open Hawaiian shirts don't line up to teach you a valuable lesson about the difference between movies and real life. Because this was the 1980s, Cole is joined by the "comic relief codger," who fulfills the role with gusto, even performing the standard routine of popping up to cover the hero with a gun when faced with a dozen opponents. He also fulfills the role by upholding the tradition of not being very funny. You know, you could probably count the number of comic relief characters who were actually funny on one hand, even if it was a hook hand. Seeing how Cole has a cackling old fart with a white beard, a drunk guy with a white dude afro, and a sassy British gal as his army, the developer sends out a couple more guys in white suits and hires Hasegawa, telling the ninja master that they are fighting local thugs and bullies who are hassling the farmers. The ninja master doesn't really research this claim too heavily. Hasegawa himself isn't as naive about the motivations of his new employers, and he doesn't much care so long as it gives him a chance to face off against Cole. After all the expendable characters have been dealt with (how many films feature a guy who turns to alcohol and doesn't get killed as a means to motivate the hero?), and a large amount of sneaking around is done, Cole and Hasegawa finally face off in an old boxing arena. Cole also finally slips on his form-fitting white ninja uniform to contrast nicely with Hasegawa's black uniform. It's a welcome change from the tight slacks Cole's been sporting for most of the movie. Enter the Ninja isn't what one would call a great movie, but it's not as bad as you might thing. Though Cannon's follow-up, Revenge of the Ninja was both better and sillier, Enter the Ninja is still a fair movie and certainly better than the vast majority of ninja films that would follow in its footsteps. Golan's direction is pedestrian and uninteresting, but it gets the job done. His big flirtation with style is to play the "wah wah wah wahhhhh" comedy punchline music when Cole rips off Sigfried's hook hand and throws it to him with the singer, "Hey! You forgot something." The acting is not half bad. Franco Nero is not very convincing as a master of the martial arts, but he is convincing as a fist-swinging bad-ass, and on top of that, he's a decent actor. The supporting cast is okay, though most of them are relegated to the ranks of speechless thug or over-the-top action film cliche. The plot has its fair share of goofiness, of course, but at the heart of things is a predictable though time-tested story about the greedy developer picking on the innocent. That plot worked for a million black action films, so there's no reason it can't work for a ninja film. The silliness stems mostly from the fact that Cole and Hasegawa feel the need to thrown on their ninja uniforms for the big finale. What's the point? All the bad guys already know who Cole is, and everyone knows who Hasegawa is as well. What's the point in wrapping your head up in a sight-restricting hood to hide your identity? Nothing looks sillier than a guy in a white ninja suit stepping out of a Caddie in a modern setting. Another big question would be: where the hell are the cops? Not to mention the Filipinos who can fight? I mean, the Philippines aren't a savage and untamed land. They do have police there. The first thing Cole does when he gets to town is impale a guy on a work bench. You'd think someone with some authority would want to have a chat about that. People are killed left and right, and not once do the authorities show up to even be corrupt and take a bribe from the rich guy. And then of course, there's the final joke in which Cole thinks about killing the now reformed and utterly defenseless Sigfried just for shits and giggles. All things considered, and in the greater scheme of things, Stone's script commits no great offenses worse than anything you'd find in any other low budget action film. In fact, as far as ninja films go, it's one of the most sensible scripts around. Although Hasegawa and Cole do eventually suit up in the traditional garb, Cole does most of his ninja-ing in a pair of slacks and a seersucker shirt or in a jogging suit. And not once do they perform mystical feats like flying or disappearing or splitting themselves into phantom decoy images. It's all pretty straight-forward, no-nonsense stuff, and given the utter absurdities that would soon clog the ninja arteries, the simple yet grounded-in-reality (relatively speaking) story is a welcome thing. It wasn't until after this film that things would get ridiculous and Tomas Tang would have lanky white guys in shiny red, white and blue ninja outfits running around with bright yellow headbands that said "Ninja" on them in that jagged "Oriental" font. Enter the Ninja takes a lot of flack as a result of just how low the genre would sink - not that it was ever that high. When your two best entries in a genre both come from Cannon Films, you're in trouble. Most of the disdain is unwarranted however, and people often attribute the foibles of later movies to this one. A quick viewing will reveal to you that, while not a great movie by any stretch, Enter the Ninja also isn't a bad movie. As action fare goes, it's fairly harmless and even enjoyable in that late 1970s/early 1980s way. It maintains a pretty violent pace despite the lame comic relief bits, the action comes frequently, and the script, while no work of art, at least makes simple sense in the world of action films. Try on any plot from any Tang/Godfrey Ho film and tell me if you don't find yourself with a newfound appreciation for Mike Stone's derivative but more or less logical story (again, this is all relative). The fight choreography ranges from typical to slightly above-average, with the final sword fight between Cole (being played under the mask by Mike Stone) and Hasegawa being the high point. It's obvious that you have two real martial artists doing the work during that scene, and while no one's going to look at it and see Swordsman-like movies, it's a not a bad bout. The rest of the fights consist of the typical American "guy with martial arts fights lugs without martial arts," so there's very little in the way of martial arts choreography. Franco Nero basically hits the guys a lot, then transforms into Mike Stone to deliver the occasional kick or flip. Not good stuff, but not bad if you are just looking for fist fights. All in all, if you want scintillating martial arts mayhem, Enter the Ninja is going to leave you cold. If you want historical facts about ninjas, you're going to be just as cold, and you really should start exercising better judgment in where you look for historical information. If, however, you're looking for an unpolished but fairly enjoyable low budget action film that just happens to feature two guys who don ninja uniforms at the very end, then you could do worse. It may not be art, but it's got a certain grimy charm. Art or not, it was a box office hit, and then it was even bigger when it debuted on the new medium of cable television, the format on which Cannon would build an empire. A quick release to theaters just to be polite would then be followed by heavy rotation on HBO, and an army of underaged brats would become instant fans. People like to rip apart American-made martial arts film, with the basis for the action usually being that they're generally really horrible movies. The fights are plodding and poorly done, the scripts are atrocious if there's even enough work put into it to be atrocious, and the production values are slightly above what you might find in your better infomercials. They're easy targets and generally deserve the wrath they inspire. But they're not all totally worthless. Enter the Ninja has very few examples of what might be called good writing or good fighting, but it's not the worst thing ever. When Stone and Kosugi lock up, there's some decent stuff. When Franco Nero is in control, he caries himself with all the fleet-footed grace of a drunk lumberjack, but at least you'll believe he could kick the shit out of Sigfried. The biggest problem American films have, especially from this period, is that they almost always feature a guy with kungfu fighting a guy with no kungfu. The end result isn't much to see. While Enter the Ninja certainly has its fair share of such scuffles, it at least has the good sense to move along at a brisk pace. Within the realm of American-made martial arts films, and that's a sad realm indeed, Enter the Ninja is probably one of the top ten films, falling behind contemporaries like Revenge of the Ninja and newer films like Shanghai Noon. Cannon followed the success of this film with Revenge of the Ninja, this time turning the tables and making Sho Kosugi the hero. He did very little in Enter the Ninja until the end, but Revenge was his show. It was supposed to be Stone's show, but once again, Golan pulled the rug out from under the karate champ and left him standing in the rain. It seems kind of cruel, but given Stone's acting career after his time with Cannon (as in, he didn't have one), perhaps his acting skills were simply not as impressive as his fighting skills. Revenge of the Ninja did pair Kosugi with another real-life martial arts star, Keith Vitale, who would go on to star in a number of crappy American martial arts films and the not crappy at all Jackie Chan/Sammo Hun/Yuen Biao film, Wheels on Meals, where he was outshined by creepy Benny Urquidez. Enter the Ninja allows Sho Kosugi to enjoy what would in the ensuing years become known as the "Boba Fett Phenomenon." Named for the Star Wars bad-ass who never actually does a single bad-ass thing gets his ass handed to him lickety-split the first time we see him fight, the phenomenon happens whenever a character is perceived as an ultra-cool bad-ass despite there being a single bit of onscreen evidence to support the reputation. In Enter the Ninja we see Sho Kosugi fight twice. He gets his ass kicked both times. The only time he wins a fight is when he's tangling with a drunk. All things considered, his onscreen fight victories are no more impressive or numerous than those of Sigfried. But at least he looked good getting his ass kicked, and Sho Kosugi was aggressive enough behind the scenes to parlay his supporting villain role into a short but memorable career. When the ninja craze died out a few years later, Sho disappeared back into the shadows from whence he came, emerging only once in the 1990s in an attempt to market his "Ninjasize" workout video, complete with spandex-clad "Ninjettes." It didn't really grab the world the same way Tae Bo or the Gazelle did, but I guess it paid a few bills. Good or bad, and I maintain that there is actually more good than bad, Enter the Ninja is a landmark film, the one that started it all, the Conan the Barbarian of ninja exploitation. Just like Conan, Enter the Ninja's reputation is harmed by the infinite crimes that would be committed in its name, from crappy American ninja movies to guys with mullets wearing ninja pants and practicing their nunchuka skills in the park, Enter the Ninja spawned far more idiocy than it actually contains. It's not as good as Conan by any stretch of the imagination, but it's also not as bad as you may think if you haven't seen it in a long time. Goofy action fun is all I need sometimes, and that's all Enter the Ninja delivers. Labels: B-Masters Roundtable, Martial Arts: Ninjas, Stars: Franco Nero, Stars: Sho Kosugi, Studio: Cannon, Year: 1981 posted by Keith at 12:30 AM | 0 Comments Sunday, December 23, 2001Pray for Death
1985, United States. Starring Sho Kosugi, Kane Kosugi, Shane Kosugi, James Booth, Donna Kei Benz, Norman Burton, Matthew Faison, Parley Baer, Robert Ito, Michael Constantine, Alan Amiel, Woody Watson, Charles Grueber, Nik Hagler, Chris Wycliff. Directed by Gordon Hessler.
Just when you thought America's cities were getting safer (as our suburbs and rural towns get more dangerous), you leave the house to walk down to the corner bodego and catch sight of a bunch of cops fighting with a ninja. It's more than likely that at some point the ninja throws down an eggshell grenade and disappears into a puff of red smoke. Or maybe you stumble upon a couple of ninjas all fighting each other in the middle of 2nd Avenue. It may sound weird to our late 1990s ears, but way back in the 1980s, this is how things were. America's cities were infested with ninjas, usually wearing the traditional black ninja suit, but sometimes also wearing shiny gold, red, green, or purple outfits. The urban ninja is not above a fashion statement, after all. Statistics estimate that in the early- to mid-1980s, for every thousand cockroaches in a city, there were also five ninjas. Since every American city has a cockroach population numbering in the hundreds of millions, you can bet that's quite a few ninjas along for the ride. With so many ninjas doing backflips down Broadway or scaling our gleaming skyscrapers, it was only a matter of time before they started organizing and demanding recognition and certain rights that the rest of us take for granted. The urban ninja movement was championed by one man. One man who mysteriously appeared when the ninjas became a noticeable force. One man who, like his brothers and sisters in ninjitsu, disappeared just as mysteriously as he appeared. One man who, from time to time, could be seen hosting his own martial arts workout show complete with a team of skimpily-clad "ninjettes." The man was Sho Kosugi. Yes, in the 1980s, this man crapped ninja movies with the regularity of an octogenarian addicted to bran muffins and bean soda. Usually, the results were about the same. However, he did manage to squeeze out a couple decent films amid the flurry of cinematic Mr. Hankies for which we love him so dearly. Kosugi first came to national prominence the same time the ninja became a household word and little middle schoolers started wearing tabi boots and ninja headbands to class. The film was Enter the Ninja starring meaty Italian action star Franco Nero as the first white ninja and a man who has the power to magically loose 25 or 30 pounds every time he puts on his ninja suit or does some martial arts. Kosugi's best film is Revenge of the Ninja, and he must have felt the same way, because that's the film he chose to make again, calling it Pray for Death. The plots are almost identical, though Kosugi's ninja suit is much sillier in this film, comprised of a metal helmet with chainlink face cover. Not exactly the best apparel for slinking around in the shadows and doing back flips, but it beats the shiny gold suits some ninjas got. Since Pray for Death rips off Kosugi's best film, it can't help but be at least sorta decent. And that's just what it is, though maybe even a little bit better. Kosugi reprises his role as a Japanese immigrant to the United States. He has a shady past as a ninja, obviously, but these days is committed to putting his demons behind him and being a man of peace. Are there really still secret ninja training camps in Japan? I mean, what are ninjas up to these days? Somehow, I think the only ninja training camps are here in America. Self-proclaimed Grand Master Philip Holder moved his ninja training camp to Gainesville when I lived there, bringing hours of countless amusement to the locals. Myself, my friends Eric and Bill, and many other martial arts students around town wondered who went to ninja summer camp (we later found out it was mostly fat guys and guys who claimed to be former Navy SEALS), and we amused ourselves with mental images of ninjas sitting around a fire roasting marshmallows and swapping ghost stories, or hiking through the woods singing "Rainbow Connection." Anyway, I don't know if Sho Kosugi ever made a guest appearance at Grand Master Philip Holder's ninja summer camp, or if they scored the out-of-work Ninjettes (I'd like to see them fight the WCW Nitro Girls) for motivation. Ninja summer camp was shrouded in secrecy, and you had to do some rite of ninja passage/test of will thing before Grand Master Philip Holder would accept you (I'm pretty sure the test of will was waiting seven business days for Grand Master Philip Holder to see if your check cleared. If it did, you could then be a ninja). Forgive me if I confuse some of the elements of Pray for Death with stuff that was actually in Revenge of the Ninja. Sometimes, I can't keep track of the two, sort of like my inability to ever remember what happens in Friday the 13th parts six and seven. Of course, it's probably sad that I can remember what happens in parts 1-5 and 8. Kosugi's life in America is okay. He has a happy family (including his real sons, Shane and Kane) and a nice house. Unfortunately, the house he bought is a traditional drop-off and pick-up point for the local crime ring, whose main enforcer is some fat-ass British guy named Limehouse. Always having mobsters sneaking around his property makes Sho suspicious, and eventually he crosses them and they take revenge by attacking his family. The man of peace is once again pushed to turn to his violent past, don his goofy helmet, and chop the shit out of the men who wronged his family. This movie has everything you have come to expect from a Sho Kosugi ninja movie. Kane is picked on by the neighborhood kids and must kick their asses. Also, any movie that stars a little martial arts kid is required to have scenes in which he runs through the bad guys' legs and either kicks or headbutts the thugs in the balls. Satisfyingly, Kane Kosugi delivers on all counts. The villains are all ridiculously over the top, just as they should be. Sho is in good form. The only thing hurting this movie is what hurts any martial arts film about masters kicking ass on American thugs: there's no real competition. Sure, Limehouse is a big chub who gets some ham-fisted blows in, but for the most part, without this gang being able to call in their own ninja like the gang in Revenge of the Ninja, it's pretty much Sho all the way. In general, when gambling on fights like this, one should always put their chips on the pissed off master ninja rather than on the bumbling thugs who shot his wife. A little advice on games of chance involving ninjas, just in case it ever comes up. With no viable opponents to really provide cool martial arts scenes, most of the action involves Sho jumping, slicing, and being shot at. It's all pretty good stuff, and the film seems to have stepped the violence up a notch, though much of it was excised in one of the video releases I came across (another had it all there). This film is historic in exactly the opposite way Enter the Ninja was historic. Enter the Ninja was the beginning of the whole trend and marked the point at which sho Kosugi's career was born. Pray for Death is pretty much the American ninja film's last hurrah, and Sho Kosugi dropped off the radar shortly after its release. Plenty of other American ninja movies were made after Pray for Death, but none of them were part of the heyday of ninja films. None of them got to play in actual movie theaters like this and Sho's previous films. After Pray for Death, the ninja movement in America was dead, relegated to the direct-to-video realm in which so many shitty movies thrive. Sho's career had to end at some time, and at least he managed to deliver a pretty enjoyable, if not ludicrous (and aren't they all), final film. Of course, he would stretch the ninja line as much as possible, appearing as a host on late night movies, video releases, and of course, as the instructor in those workout videos with the Ninjettes. I really miss the aspect of the 1980s that saw low budget weirdness in mainstream theaters. You don't see films like Pray for Death these days. Big budget blockbusters are so busy being inane and awful that there's no room left for goofy little lowbrow pleasures like ninja or barbarian films. It's sad, this passing of an era. It's sad, this loss of the days when ninjas roamed the streets of our cities. It's sad, this passing of the era of true bad film, of nights spent sneaking peaks at it on late night cable television after the parents had gone to sleep. Like heavy metal, I'm sure we shall one day return to this simpler, more enjoyable time. A man shall arise to lead us away from the glitz and glamour of boring, obnoxious billion dollar movies and back into the promised land of small, simple, enjoyable bad film, preferably peppered with nudity and ninjas and little kids whacking big fat guys in the balls (this staple of America's Funniest Home Videos is just one of the many cinematic treasures given to us by ninja movies). One man will emerge to champion the cause, to serve as the (somewhat homely) face of hope in these trying times. One man shall deliver us back to the days when films like Pray for Death and Krull and Metalstorm: The Destruction of Jared Syn and that movie starring Molly Ringwald as the cute space ragamuffin graced our movie theaters. One man will teach us how to once again love movies centered around ninjas or "space cowboys." One man... And I think that man will be Sho Kosugi. Labels: Martial Arts: Ninjas, Stars: Sho Kosugi, Year: 1985 posted by Keith at 12:51 AM | 0 Comments Tuesday, April 17, 2001Revenge of the Ninja
1982, United States. Starring Sho Kosugi, Kane Kosugi, Keith Vitali, Virgil Frye, Ashley Ferrare, Mario Gallo, Arthur Roberts. Directed by Sam Firstenberg.
Sometimes, real life events contribute to the effectiveness of an on-screen story. A tremendous act of synchronicity results in the alignment of elements, each one falling into place so perfectly that it could never be orchestrated by anything but nature itself. Such is the case with the mini-flood of ninja movies during the 1980s, and the life of the star of most of the movies -- a man named Sho Kosugi. No one had heard of Sho Kosugi, but when the ninja craze hit American shores, he suddenly stepped out of the shadows and into the limelight, bringing to our attention the secret tactics and lives of the mysterious warriors known as ninja. When the craze finally died out, Sho Kosugi vanished back into the shadows without a trace. Some said he went into hiding, pursued by an ancient sect of ninja who wanted to kill him for divulging their secrets to the world. Some say that to this very day he is kicked back and living the good life in some secret mansion alongside Bruce Lee, also in hiding from those who would seek to murder him. Others say he is living life as a washed-up has-been, possibly working at a Big Lots. Whatever the case may be, there is no denying that Sho Kosugi's mysterious past, present, and future, contributed to the mystique of the ninja movie. And though his son, Kane, carries on the tradition established by his father of Kosugi family members starring in sub-par martial arts films (Kane has starred in shows like KakuRanger and Ultraman Powered), he does not wield the power or command the respect his father did. Whatever the case, Sho Kosugi was a Asian bad-ass in American film when there were no Asian bad-asses. Bruce Lee had passed on and wouldn't enjoy a revival until the 1990s. Sammo Hung and Jackie Chan were busy kicking ass over in Hong Kong, but their wild exploits were all but non-existent if you were living in America. No, the best we had over here was Chuck Norris, donning the traditional martial arts garb of a cowboy hat, cowboy boots, some rawhide vest, and of course, Chuck Norris brand karate stretch jeans, as advertised in early 1980s copies of Inside Kungfu. When the notorious production team of Golan and Globus, who gave us many of the films we watch today on Mystery Science Theater 3000, decided they wanted to make a film about ninjas, they called upon Sho Kosugi to be the heavy. For some reason, Italian B-movie star Franco Nero was cast as the doughy hero. He's best known for his role as Django, the cowboy who wanders the old west with a coffin in tow. That's cool and all, but now he got to don a white ninja outfit and have a stunt double jump around. It ... didn't work. Anyway, the film was Enter the Ninja, and while there are many interesting stories about it, I will save those for an actual review of Enter the Ninja. Suffice it to say that audiences were wowed by the zany ninja antics, a trend was born, and no one gave a shit about Franco Nero. They did, however, dig Sho Kosugi. So when Golan and Globus decided to milk the genre for all it was worth (but not as badly as Thomas Tang would milk it) and make another ninja film, they called on Sho Kosugi to play the lead. This was at a time when Asian men were reduced to playing ass grabbers (Kinjite: Forbidden Subjects) and seedy criminals (Year of the Dragon). Even black heroes had fallen by the wayside. The 1980s were the era of big white heroes, and the days of Bruce Lee and Fred Williamson were gone. So it was a big deal to have Sho Kosugi storm the party and lend a non-white face to violent, heroic daring-do. Although Sho Kosugi was still fulfilling a stereotype (martial arts bad-ass), you gotta admit that's not a bad stereotype to have. It's better than most. And it's cooler than the white American stereotype, which is a big dumb-ass with a gun. He fulfilled a more important role, though, that had been vacated with the death of black action films and the gentrification of kungfu films. He was a non-white hero kicking ass in a predominantly white world. It's no wonder Sho and the ninja films were embraced so whole-heartedly. For anyone who couldn't relate to the time-hopping exploits of Michael J. Fox or the sweaty machismo of Rambo, Sho Kosugi was all they had. Incidentally, there are a lot of big dumb-asses with guns in this film, which was called Revenge of the Ninja. It has nothing to do with Enter the Ninja, other than having ninjas all over the damn place. During the 1980s, you could actually see more ninjas running around in broad daylight in downtown LA than you saw at night during the middle ages in Japan. In the case of Sho Kosugi, he is a former ninja (I didn't know there were such thing -- do you get a good 401k as a retired ninja?) who moves to Los Angeles to run an antique shop with his friend. What he doesn't know is that his friend is using the antiques as a way to smuggle dope. As more and more thugs start hanging around the shop, Sho starts to catch on that something is up. In order to stop his firestorm of ninja powers, the dope smuggling gangsters kidnap Sho's son (played by his real son, Kane). So let me get this straight -- you have this ninja who you've pissed off. And the best thing you can come up with to make him stop hassling you is to kidnap his son? Why would you kidnap a ninja's son? Don't they know that will just piss him off more and make him do even more flips than ever before? Another ninja is called in to kill Sho Kosugi after the shit hits the proverbial fan. Mobsters are getting slashed left and right as Sho seeks revenge and the other ninja just doesn't give a shit. Big surprise when the other ninja turns out to be Sho's friend. What was he expecting? I would imagine the society of ninjas is pretty small, even on a global scale, so you get to know all the other ninjas after a while. The finale has Sho and the other ninja storming a high-rise that has been fortified by the mobsters. They kill lots of gun-toting toadies before finally facing off on the roof. Somewhere amid it all, a police office played by Keith Vitali (Wheels on Meals) crawls around wounded in the hallway. Despite the fact that it contains more cheese than one of those disgusting stuffed crust pizzas, I really like Revenge of the Ninja. I remember the first time I saw it. I was at my grandparent's house for the weekend. They just got cable TV, and I was up late watching HBO, hoping to catch a glimpse of some boobies or something. Revenge of the Ninja gave me that and so much more. I was going wild, and although I didn't go out and buy a headband that said "Ninja" on it in that jagged "oriental" typeface (whatever), I was definitely hooked on gory ninja films as much as I was on gory kungfu films. Revenge of the Ninja is tons of funs, with a tremendous body count, fountains of blood, cheap 1980s sex scenes, Kane Kosugi kicking ass on gangsters, Sho Kosugi kicking ass on gangsters, dueling ninjas, and pretty much everything else a boy could ask for. The martial arts, which are mostly sword fights, are actually pretty good. The bag o' ninja tricks each ninja has is more fun than any of that James Bond gadgetry. Sho Kosugi is a fun hero -- the man of peace pushed too far. We don't see too many of those these days, but they were always my favorite. These days, everyone is all to ready to duke it out and go to war, but Sho demonstrated restraint. Even when faced with physical violence against himself, he held back, partly because he didn't want to reveal that he was a ninja (as if kicking someone's ass would make them automatically go, "Shit, that dude must be a ninja!"), but mostly because he believed in peace. Violence was always the final, tragic solution, but when he resigned himself to it, he sure didn't hold back! So Revenge of the Ninja may not be Legendary Weapons of China. It may not be the best film you'll ever see, but it's best American ninja film you'll ever see, and probably the most competent American martial arts film, period. It's action-packed and delivers a solid 90 minutes of entertainment. So watch it -- if you dare! Labels: Martial Arts: Ninjas, Stars: Sho Kosugi, Year: 1982 posted by Keith at 3:48 PM | 0 Comments |
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