Ninja Assassin-
Short Review
They dropped the ball, but it didn't roll too far.
Entirely-Too-Long Review
I wasn't planning on seeing this in theaters, but I broke down and saw it anyway. It's not bad. There are things I liked about it and things I didn't, and oddly enough, the action was the best part of the movie. Now, I went into it not expecting much in the way of story or character, and there
wasn't much, but this is the first movie I've seen in a long time where the characters almost ruined it for me. They were all just so terribly generic. Raizo was cool and all, but he was pretty much your typical strong, silent, humorless hero that can do no wrong. Boring. But I forgive him because of his abs. Putting the "gentle-hearted kunoichi" in the movie was one of the worst things they could have done because it reeeaaaally detracted from the main plot and made it look like they didn't know which way they wanted to take it (CIA stumbles on ninja assassination scheme? Ex-ninja killer takes revenge for slain lover? Well-oiled vagabond attempts to overcome influence of cult brainwashing? Why not all three?!). Same with Rick Yune, that villain came outta nowhere and was mostly pointless. Naomi Harris, bunch of old white dudes, who cares? It's like they thought they could barrage us with a ton of unrelated subplots and we wouldn't be able to tell that they didn't have the script ready by deadline. I mean, I'm no Richard Feynman, but don't insult my intelligence. What I was really interested to see and what I thought they handled somewhat well was the ninja background and training. At first, I thought the training scenes were pretty hardcore awesome, but the further the movie progressed, the more they seemed to be set on making them look like some kind of creepy cult (calling Ozunu "father" all the time and doing that silly whispering thing whenever they were lurking in the shadows, what the hell?). Speaking of ninja training, how is it that they devoted their whole lives to becoming the most feared assassins in history and yet they're showing up on surveillance videos, throwing shuriken at the hoods of cars instead of the tires, and failing to kill one lousy guy even though there's fifty billion of them and he's been out of practice for years? Oh well, I can even forgive that; after all, realism obviously wasn't the focus of this movie. The action was, and all things considered, I thought it was well done. Much better than standard Hollywood chop socky bullshit, and done with some class and a lot of lighthearted brutality. Some was pretty hard to see (the chase in traffic looked like watching a snowy TV set on 100x zoom), but it was mostly easy to follow and well-choreographed, if a little repetitive. I was a little disappointed by the lack of empty hand fighting, but I guess that's to be expected from what was basically an Asian-themed
300 ripoff. I got what I came for, and all things considered, I don't feel like I wasted $9.25 seeing it (maybe only like $3.25). But at the same time, it didn't feel like something that I hadn't seen before, where with the right direction and creative production, it probably could have. Although I have to say, when Naomi Harris uttered that last line "my heart is over here!" I threw up in my mouth a little bit.
6.5/10
Japanfan4ever said:
because this film and other recent ninja films are about effects and crazy visuals. They're not about martial arts.
Wrong! While no cinematic masterpiece, Isaac Florentine's
Ninja was all about the physical skills of the leads and stunt guys. And there are some legitimate movies on ninja lore out there (think
Owl's Castle), even if they are hard to find. And what about
Ninja Assassin's visuals were "crazy," exactly?