Austin Premiere
Ah, the ninja. There’s just so much to love about these
shadowy figures, so much cinematic potential, and yet
there are far, far more bad ninja films than there are good
ones. The last major ninja hopeful was Ryuhei Kitamura’s
Azumi, a film that promised much but misfired badly
with its clumsy plot, hugely unsympathetic characters
and meandering, unfocused run time. So there was some
trepidation going in to Shimoyama Ten’s Shinobi.
Happily this film delivers, and delivers large. Filled
with absolutely breath taking cinematography, a strong
cast and excellent special effects Shinobi strikes a pitch
perfect balance between the romance and action aspects
of its story, neatly striking the mid point between art
house and glossy multiplex. The first thing that strikes
you about SHINOBI is just how good it looks. This film
is flat out gorgeous from beginning to end, shot on a
grand scale with every frame flawlessly composed. The
lighting, cinematography and sets are all astounding.
This is a visual marvel, absolutely stunning to look at.
The next thing you will notice is how the film balances
between romance and action. While the promotional
materials tended to lean towards the romance side of
things, the film is far more balanced between the two
elements, moving easily from one to the other, expertly
using the budding relationship to add some emotional
wallop to the inevitable violence while using the
action to keep the emotional story from bogging down.
Shimoyama dances nimbly from one element to the next,
smoothly shifting gears and pressing all the right buttons
along the way. And what of the action? Stunning.
While the return to non-assisted martial arts has been
a welcome development in Hong Kong and Thailand,
Shinobi proves that CG boosted action can be just as
compelling when done well. And this film does it very,
very well. The Shiobi’s powers are many and diverse.
Tak Sakaguchi’s Yashamaru shoots razor wire cables
from his flowing sleeves, wires he can use either to sever
limbs or launch himself from place to place. There’s
the shape shifter, the feral beast, the poison woman,
knives attached to chains, metallic claws, flying needles,
spinning discs, all manner of mayhem. Each shinobi has
a very specific skill and each of those skills are put to
excellent use at different points throughout the film. The
action sequences are plentiful, very well choreographed,
and perfectly executed. In closing, Shinobi succeeds
everywhere that Azumi failed. Where Kitamura’s film
frustrated, Shimoyama exhilarates. This is one not to be
missed. -(Twitchfilm)