3 Ninjas Kick Back
(Children's adventure -- Color)
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Grandpa - Victor Wong
Colt - Max Elliott Slade
Rocky - Sean Fox
Tum Tum - Evan Bonifant
Miyo - Caroline Junko King
Koga - Sab Shimono
Glam - Dustin Nguyen
Vinnie - Jason Schombing
Slam - Angelo Tiffe
The new adventure engages its three cute ninjas, Rocky (Sean Fox), Colt (Max Elliott Slade) and Tum Tum (Evan Bonifant), in two missions. Resourceful siblings have to help Grandpa Mori (Victor Wong) return to Japan to present a ceremonial dagger he had won half a century ago to the new winner of the Ninja tournament. And they have to return to L.A. on time to aid their baseball team, the Dragons, against the rival Mustangs.
In pursuit of the dagger, which is a key to a secret gold cave, Grandpa's old enemy Koga (Sab Shimono) recruits a trio of spaced-out heavy metal rockers. Broadly played, and sporting outrageous wigs and costumes, they are more bumbling buffoons than villains, and provide the excuse for some hilarious fights and inventive physical comedy.
To broaden the story's appeal, scripter Mark Saltzman shrewdly adds a young girl, Miyo (Caroline Junko King), whose skills let her teach the boys a lesson or two in the ninja arts. Miyo also becomes the romantic interest of Colt, the adolescent who begins to experience pangs of the heart.
A new bicultural and reconciliatory tone underlies "3 Ninjas Kick Back." Some past American movies have portrayed aggressive competition and hostility toward Japan. This film, however, stresses the similarities of these countries and what kids of both cultures can learn from each other. Staying with Miyo's family, the Americans get a geography lesson, eat Japanese food, improve their skills. Similarly, Miyo experiences firsthand icons of American culture.
Charles T. Kanganis, who has directed a number of serviceable actioners, knows that the crucial factors in such adventures are comic energy and swift tempo. Indeed, excepting a couple of superfluous scenes, like those involving the ninjas' parents, pic benefits from kinetic wit and fast pacing.
Tech credits, notably the lensing and colorful production design, are most proficient.
Film's moralistic dimensions are so well integrated into the narrative that they're hardly noticeable. Still, as in "The Wizard of Oz,""The Secret Garden" andother classic fairy tales, younger viewers will get a flavor of a new and "dangerous" magical world with a healthy dosage of traditional family values, such as security of country and comfort of home.
Camera (Technicolor), Christopher Faloona; editor, David Rennie; supervising editor, Jeffrey Reiner; music, Richard Marvin; production design, Hiroyuki Takatsu, Gregory Martin; art direction, Scott Meehan; set decoration, Karin McGaughey; costume design, Takeshi Yamazaki, Miye Matsumoto; sound (Dolby), Clifford Gynn; associate producers, Steven L. Bernstein, Vicki Ellis; assistant director, Edward Licht; second unit camera, Nobuhito Noda; casting, Lucy Boulting. Reviewed at Beverly Connection, L.A., April 30, 1994. MPAA Rating: PG. Running time: 99 min.
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