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Surf Ninjas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Surf Ninjas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Surf Ninjas
Directed by Neal Israel
Produced by Evzen Kolar
Written by Dan Gordon
Neal Israel
Starring Ernie Reyes, Jr.
Rob Schneider
Leslie Nielsen
Music by David Kitay
Cinematography Arthur Albert
Victor Hammer
Editing by Tom Walls
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) August 20, 1993
Running time 87 min.
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $4,916,135
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Surf Ninjas, sometimes called Surf Ninjas of the South China Seas,[1] is a 1993 American comedic family film involving martial arts, directed by Neal Israel and written by Dan Gordon. The film stars Ernie Reyes Jr., Rob Schneider, Nicolas Cowan, and Leslie Nielsen. Surf Ninjas follows two teenage surfers from Los Angeles who discover that they are crown princes of the Asian kingdom Patusan and reluctantly follow their destinies to dethrone an evil colonel that rules over the kingdom. Surf Ninjas was filmed in Los Angeles, Hawaii, and Thailand. A video game was also developed and released in conjunction with the film. Surf Ninjas was released in the United States on August 20, 1993, being received generally unfavorably by critics. The film was released on VHS in December 1993 and re-released on DVD in September 2002.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Johnny (Ernie Reyes, Jr.) and Adam (Nicolas Cowan) are teenage surfers who reside in Los Angeles with their father Mac (John Karlen). Two weeks before Johnny's 16th birthday, ninjas attack the teenagers, but they are stopped by Zatch (Ernie Reyes Sr.), a warrior with an eye patch. A follow-up attack results in the kidnapping of Mac, while Zatch is able to get the teenagers and their friend Iggy (Rob Schneider) away from the ninjas. Adam discovers that the video game on his Sega Game Gear correlates with the events happening around him and that he can control some events through his console. Safely away from the ninjas, Zatch reveals to Johnny and Adam that they are the sons of a Patusani king, whose land and monarchy was overthrown by Colonel Chi (Leslie Nielsen) when the boys were young. Zatch tells them that it is their destiny to return to Patusan, overthrow Colonel Chi, and rescue the population. Zatch takes the boys to the Patusani district in Los Angeles, the home of refugees from Chi's rule. Johnny is introduced to a Patusani princess, Ro-May (Kelly Hu), who has been betrothed to Johnny since childhood.

Ninjas attack the group again, and Johnny finds his inherent abilities as a warrior prince emerge, successfully defeating several foes. With the ninjas dispatched, Johnny, Adam, Iggy, Zatch, and Ro-May decide to travel to Patusan. They are followed by a detective, Lieutenant Spence (Tone Loc), who had been investigating the ninja attacks on the boys. The group reaches Patusan and see the effects of Colonel Chi's rule, including a burned village and a Patusani chain gang monitored by Chi's henchmen. When Adam and Spence inadvertently fall into the sight of the henchmen, the group is forced to fight them. The henchmen are defeated, and the villagers are freed from the chain gang.

Zatch then leads the group to uncover a hidden cave in which the weapons of the Patusani monarchy are stored. Using his Game Gear and being helped by a monkey, Adam is able to uncover the cave for the group. In the cave, Zatch arms Johnny and attacks him in a tribulation to prepare the boy for future challenges. Johnny is beaten down repeatedly, but he is able to achieve the upper hand and disarm Zatch. The group rallies the villagers to overthrow Colonel Chi, and they travel to the shore of the mainland across from an island that is the home to the royal city and Chi's dungeon. Unable to take a boat to the unprotected side of the island due to an impassable reef, Johnny and Adam tell the Patusanis, who are expert at wood carving, to carve surfboards. With everyone equipped with their own surfboard, they swim to the unprotected side.

After landing at the island, Johnny and Zatch lead the attack on the royal city, taking down Chi's henchmen. Johnny and Adam's adoptive father Mac is freed, and Johnny confronts Colonel Chi, successfully defeating him with the help of Adam and his Game Gear. With Chi's rule undone, peace is restored to Patusan. Johnny is seated as the heralded warrior prince with Ro-May as his princess and Adam as a prince. Johnny declares for the monarchy to be dissolved and announces that Patusan would operate as a democracy under the people.

[edit] Production

Surf Ninjas was filmed during the summer of 1992.[2] Filming locations included Thailand and Hawaii.[3] The second half of the film was shot first, and the crew moved to Los Angeles to film the first half.[2] New Line Cinema and Sega of America established a financial relationship in which a Sega Game Gear video game would be developed for the film. Game designers began developing the video game Surf Ninjas when the film was only in its scripting phase, receiving creative input from director Neal Israel.[4] In turn, Sega partially financed the film. Screenwriter Dan Gordon said that he wrote action sequences that would both suit the film and serve as a springboard for the video game.[5] In the film, one of the lead characters is shown playing the Surf Ninjas video game on a Sega Game Gear. The video game was released before the film's release, and it was considered the first movie-based video game to precede the film itself.[4]

[edit] Release

The studio New Line Cinema released Surf Ninjas two weeks earlier than its planned release date in Evansville, Indiana and Lubbock, Texas as part of a test of regional markets. The early release marked the first time that a major film was released in Evansville before its national opening without any local ties. The president of theatrical marketing at New Line, Chris Pula, selected Evansville for its family-oriented audiences. Pula explained, "Evansville is traditionally a strong family market. Also, we have a strong relationship with the exhibitors in that area." The president said that the studio was testing the film in a larger market than usual due to its uncertainty about the film's reception, and that the studio would measure its marketing success with ticket receipts.[6]

Surf Ninjas was widely released in 1,321 theaters in the United States on August 20, 1993. Over its opening weekend, the film grossed $2,026,278,[7] placing #13 in box office rankings ahead of Manhattan Murder Mystery.[8] Surf Ninjas ultimately grossed $4,916,135 in the United States.[7] The film was released on VHS on December 29, 1993.[9] It was subsequently released on DVD on September 3, 2002.[10]

[edit] Critical reaction

Janet Maslin of The New York Times called most of Surf Ninjas "only mindlessly watchable" and called the film "another of Hollywood's efforts to prove that the American mall mentality is at home in any corner of the globe". Maslin also found the film to lack in actual surfing content.[11] Lynn Voedisch of the Chicago Sun-Times described Surf Ninjas as "a marriage of pop icons that simply was fated to be", citing children's love for ninjas, especially the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and for the surf culture. Voedisch considered Rob Schneider's presence as comic relief unfunny, believing that Leslie Nielsen should have received more screen time as the dictator.[12] Calvin Wilson of the Kansas City Star called the film "a disgrace... even by Hollywood standards", seeing it as a mess of child lead roles, unfunny cameo roles by Schneider and Nielsen, martial arts action, and lame jokes. Wilson considered the story "stale and uninspired" that involved "people we don't care about doing things we can't believe".[13]

Stephen Hunter of The Baltimore Sun thought the film's lead Ernie Reyes, Jr. was too old and too muscular to be received believably as a 15-year-old teenager. Hunter otherwise found the Reyes to impress with their fighting skills, though the film's martial arts sequences were "bloodless and absurd". Hunter also criticized the director for depriving the film of personality, with its lack of danger, seriousness, or spontaneity.[14] Richard Harrington of The Washington Post found the film to be "a harmless summer's entertainment" for young people who enjoyed the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles films and 3 Ninjas. Harrington enjoyed Reyes, Jr. as the protagonist but found Nielsen to be disappointing.[15] Paul Sherman of the Boston Herald thought that Surf Ninjas was "little more than a succession of dudespeak, surfing, skateboarding, video games, generic rock soundtrack and strained knucklehead humor". Sherman admired the story arc in which the protagonists learn to accept their destinies, but he thought that "the manufactured thrills along the way get obnoxious". Sherman thought that the film would only appeal to children under 12 years old, though the film's locations in Thailand in the second half added an exotic atmosphere.[16]

Desmond Ryan of The Philadelphia Inquirer thought that Leslie Nielsen was deceptively portrayed in a major role similar to that of Lieutenant Frank Drebin from the The Naked Gun films, instead having merely "a running and unfunny gag about his malfunctioning answering machine and generally wasted otherwise". Ryan also found the film's dialogue to be "painful" and considered Surf Ninjas to be "beyond airheaded".[17] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle considered the story of Surf Ninjas to be "harmless and painfully dull". LaSalle thought that the pacing of the film was too long with only "two smirks over the course of 90 minutes".[18] Sean Piccoli of The Washington Times thought that the film's "dull stretch" was buoyed by the presence of Rob Schneider. Piccoli compared the martial arts choreography in the film to the "cartoon fantasies that little boys re-enact on neighbors' lawns: The good guys, alone and outnumbered by the charging horde, air-punch their way to glory."[19]

Ron Weiskind of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette perceived Reyes, Jr. as "a likable presence on screen" and Schneider to be occasionally humorous in his series of gaffs. Weiskind thought that even with the abundance of martial arts in the film, the scenes were generally too lifeless.[20] Joe Holleman of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch thought that Surf Ninjas pushed "the right buttons to guarantee adolescent enjoyment". Holleman acknowledged that the film was "not exactly a milestone in cinematic achievement", but he applauded the acrobatic choreography and the delivery of Schneider's throwaway lines in "the movie's funniest moments".[21] Sean P. Means of The Salt Lake Tribune described the film as a Toys "R" Us version of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, with "the cartoonish martial-arts sequences [owing] their entire existence to the villains' stupidity". Means thought that the film was ultimately "as silly as it is forgettable".[22]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jerry Hopkins (2005). Thailand Confidential. Tuttle Publishing, 210. ISBN 079460093X. 
  2. ^ a b Ian Spelling. "Surf's Up for Schneider", Chicago Sun-Times, 1993-09-03. 
  3. ^ Sherry Crawford. "'Surf Ninjas' kicks up waves of martial arts fun for young set", Evansville Courier & Press, 1993-08-09. 
  4. ^ a b "Film studios face reality with game tie-ins", Orlando Sentinel, 1993-07-27. 
  5. ^ William Paul (December 2001). "The K-Mart Audience at the Mall Movies", in Ina-Rae HaRk: Exhibition, the Film Reader. Routledge, 83. ISBN 0415235189. 
  6. ^ Sherry Crawford. "Evansville to get early showing of 'major' film in marketing test", Evansville Courier & Press, 1993-07-31. 
  7. ^ a b Surf Ninjas (1993). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
  8. ^ "`Fugitive' Runs Away With the Summer Box Office", San Francisco Chronicle, 1993-08-24. 
  9. ^ "Coming soon to video", Austin American-Statesman, 1993-12-03. 
  10. ^ Surf Ninjas DVD Features. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
  11. ^ Janet Maslin. "Making Waves in Asia", The New York Times, 1993-08-21. 
  12. ^ Lynn Voedisch. "West Coast Surf Culture Gets A Taste of Far East", Chicago Sun-Times, 1993-08-22. 
  13. ^ Calvin Wilson. "Bad script wipes out 'Surf Ninjas'", Kansas City Star, 1993-08-20. 
  14. ^ Stephen Hunter. "Tepid 'Surf Ninjas' is a wipeout and a waste of its comic and martial arts talent", The Baltimore Sun, 1993-08-21. 
  15. ^ Richard Harrington. "'Ninjas': Silly surfing safari", The Washington Post, 1993-08-21. 
  16. ^ Paul Sherman. "'Surf Ninjas' tries but is too juvenile", Boston Herald, 1993-08-21. 
  17. ^ Desmond Ryan. "'Surf Ninjas' hits the beach with gags and a vengeance", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 1993-08-23. 
  18. ^ Mick LaSalle. "'Surf Ninjas' Wipes Out", San Francisco Chronicle, 1993-08-21. 
  19. ^ Sean Piccoli. "These `Surf Ninjas' run short of silliness", The Washington Times, 1993-08-20. 
  20. ^ Ron Weiskind. "'Surf Ninjas' chops at humor but ends up a total wipeout", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 1993-08-21. 
  21. ^ Joe Holleman. "Wave of cool humor just right for teens", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1993-08-25. 
  22. ^ Sean P. Means. "Goofy, inconsequential 'Surf Ninjas' coasts on a wave of inanity", The Salt Lake Tribune, 1993-08-26. 

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links


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