by hanshotfirst1138 » Mon Feb 09, 2015 1:32 am
In the Blood- Unbelievably boring Gina Carano vehicle which disappointing gives the action star very little action to do. Hardly any fight scenes, mostly dull action elsewhere, the plot the film insists on focusing on at the action's expense is totally uninteresting, the direction is mostly flat and dull, the movie is WAY too long, and is dully shot. Even for a DTV martial arts star, Carano's acting is wooden, and she doesn't get enough to do to compensate. Dull, dull, dull 108 minutes of my life which I can never have back. Shame, because her blend of physical skills and sex appeal is fairly rare, and she's have been a big star back in the VHS-era of DTV fight flicks under Jeff Pruit.
Ninja- Super 35 ninja flick from DTV maestro and Power Rangers veteran Isaac Florentine. In spite of being shot in scope, it's direct-to-video fare through-and-through, with Nu Image's usual cheap production values, though Alpha Stunts alum Akihiro Noguchi's fight choreography is at times impressive. Still, the film's lean runtime isn't enough to compensate for its cheesy plot, hammy acting, and cheap-looking special effects. Passable B movie fare for martial arts fans, but even then, you can do better.
Ninja 2: Shadow of a Tear- Like THIS, for instance. Though still a thinly plotted revenge storyline, Florentine again directs this sequel, this time shot on Red, with much more vigor. The narrative is still unimportant and thin at best, the acting remains comically overwrought, the production values continue look low in spite of the digital sheen, but the fight sequences all pack the proper kick this time, and they're plentiful. For DTV martial arts fare, this is absolutely what the doctor ordered, edited with the proper impact, and wisely lean. Kane Kosugi, son of Golan-Globus favorite Sho, is his father's son. Nothing groundbreaking, surprising, or particularly memorable, but a cut average but and DTV punch up movies should be. Adkins is no actor, but he's a great screen fighter, and the movie takes full advantage of his skills.
"What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one."
Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death