Revenge of the Ninja (1983) Biography, Plot, Production, Box office, Trailer

Revenge of the Ninja (1983)

Revenge of the Ninja (1983)

Revenge of the Ninja is a 1983 American martial arts-trailer film directed by Sam Firstenberg, and starring martial artist Sho Kosugi, Keith Vitali, Virgil Frye and Kane Kosugi. The plot follows a ninja trying to protect his only son from a cabal of ruthless gangsters. It is the second installment in Cannon Films’ “Ninja Trilogy” anthology series, starting with Enter the Ninja (1981) and ending with Ninja III: The Domination (1984). It was very successful at the box office, despite receiving mixed reviews from critics.

Plot.

In Japan, the home of Cho Osaki is attacked by an army of a rival ninja clan, resulting in the slaughter of his entire family except for his mother and his younger son, Kane. When Cho arrives at his estate and discovers the carnage, the ninjas attempt to kill him as well, but Cho, a highly skilled ninja himself, avenges his family and kills the attacking ninjas. Afterwards, however, he swears off being a ninja forever and moves with his son and mother to America, where he opens an Oriental art gallery with the help of his American business partner and friend, Braden, and his assistant Cathy. One night, Kane accidentally drops and breaks open one of the dolls, exposing a white dust (heroin) contained therein.

RELATED:

New York Ninja (2021) Biography, Production, Release, Trailer

As it turns out, Braden uses the doll gallery as a front for his drug-smuggling business. He tries to strike a deal with Caifano, a mob boss, but Caifano and Braden cannot find common ground and eventually engage in a turf war. Braden, as a silver “demon”-masked ninja, assassinates Caifano’s informers and relatives to make him cower down. The police are confused about the killings, and local police martial arts trainer and expert, Dave Hatcher, is assigned to find a consultant. Dave persuades his friend Cho to see his boss, and Cho attests that only a ninja could commit these crimes, but refuses to aid the police any further.
In order to avoid payment for his ‘merchandise’, Caifano sends four men to rob the gallery. Cho happens to walk into the gallery while the thugs are loading the goods in a van, is attacked and responds with hand-to-hand combat. The henchmen escape in the van with Cho in pursuit, but he fails to stop the thieves from getting away. Meanwhile, Braden stealthily arrives at Cho’s art gallery to find that it was just looted. Cho’s mother and Kane both encounter him; Braden kills Cho’s mother, but Kane manages to elude him. Cho, badly mangled, returns to find his mother murdered and his son missing.

Production.

The film was originally intended to be shot in Los Angeles, but the necessary permits, police protection, fire marshals and myriad logistics fees threatened to take up a bigger and bigger part of the film’s budget. The Utah Film Commission was trying to get Cannon Films to start producing films in their state and a representative promised no permits, location fees or union deals as well as lower salaries for local crews. The commission’s assurances persuaded Cannon to switch filming to Salt Lake City. The final rooftop fight scene between Kosugi and Roberts took two weeks to film. This was due to the required pyrotechnics, mechanical rigging, safety considerations, elaborate camera positioning (including hanging 20 stories high outside the building), and helicopter shots.

Box office

The film made $13,168,027 domestically in the United States, equivalent to $38,800,130 adjusted for inflation in 2021. In Germany, it sold 333,182 tickets in 1984, equivalent to an estimated €832,955 ($657,201) in gross revenue. In France, it sold 32,200 tickets in 1984, equivalent to an estimated €86,940 ($68,596). This adds up to an estimated total of approximately $14 million grossed worldwide. In terms of box office admissions, it sold 4.2 million tickets in the United States, 32,200 tickets in France, and 333,182 tickets in Germany, for a combined 4,565,382 tickets sold worldwide.

RELATED:

Is Ninja Assassin a True Story?

Reception

Rotten Tomatoes lists three reviews, so no aggregate rating is given on the site; two reviews are positive and one negative. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 32 out of 100, based on 5 critics, indicating “generally unfavorable reviews”. The film became a cult hit due to its elaborate martial arts sequences and B-movie production values. Variety gave it a generally favorable review, calling it “an entertaining martial arts actioner” and praising the “fight choreography by Kosugi,” despite lacking the “name players and Far East locale” of Enter the Ninja.