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Ninja III: The Domination

What apparently sexy beverage gets name-dropped twice in this review? The answer may surprise you!

This movie opens with a ninja on his way to a golf course in the American Southwest. First, he stops off by the side of the road to visit the fog-machine-serviced cave where he keeps his gear in a fake rock, like a hide-a-key. The fake rock has an internal lighting panel, the better to display his sword and ninja stars.

In a way, Ninja III: The Domination does a good job setting up its audience’s expectations. We’re not even through the opening credits, and already nothing makes any sense. And indeed, director Sam Firstenberg, a B-movie stalwart, is beginning as he means to go on.

The ninja goes to the golf course, where he proceeds to carry out a yuppie massacre. And crush a golf ball with his bare hands, just because it looks cool. The yuppie massacre brings in the cops, and the ninja kills—I counted—twenty-five of them.

He also decimates the department’s motor vehicle pool by taking out a car, two motorcycles, and a helicopter. Because this is a Cannon production, God bless ’em, the car and the motorcycles really bite it; the helicopter limps off-screen, giving us the explosive equivalent of a bedroom door swinging closed. Was it good for you too, helicopter? Call me.

The mortally wounded ninja plays peekaboo with the surviving cops, whose reaction to the wholesale slaughter of their colleagues and the mysterious escape of their bullet-riddled killer I would describe as “mildly perturbed.” I have more of an emotional response if I drop half my bagel. The cops go back to their headquarters to scratch their heads over it all, and the ninja finds his way to our heroine, Lucinda Dickey’s Christie. (I don’t want to steal from Wikipedia, but I cannot top encapsulating her as “telephone linewoman and aerobics instructor.”) He then passes on his magical sword, possessing her and tasking her with a mission of revenge: kill the cops who killed him.1

Christie is only semi-aware of what’s happening to her, since she blacks out while her inner demonic ninja uses her body to make his way down his hit list, but enough weird stuff is going on—like her pop-art industrial apartment putting on a Poltergeist-style lightshow—that hey, she’s starting to get suspicious! To toss an ““emotional”” spanner into the works—somehow one set of quotes wasn’t enough for that—her new stalking enthusiast boyfriend is one of the surviving cops.

If ever there was a work to write up solely via incredulous summary, it’s this one, and obviously I haven’t tried too hard to resist the temptation. But you have to understand that I’m barely scratching the surface here. I’m not even giving you all the details on the V8 seduction trick. Or the human drill. Or a criminally underused Sho Kosugi showing up as the movie’s Max von Sydow.

Mostly that’s because I want some of you to see this and encounter these jaw-dropping marvels of WTF cinema with fresh eyes. But it’s also because I can’t cover this the way I covered the ludicrously enjoyable Pray for Death. As much as it gloried in going over-the-top, Pray for Death was a movie, and a story, in a way that Ninja III: The Domination just isn’t.2 This is a string of separate scenes, a gaudy costume jewelry piece made up of fifteen different brooches from fifteen different Floridian grandmothers.

The actors know it, too. Lucinda Dickey gives it a try, playing her way through snarling exorcisms and upbeat aerobics numbers in a way that suggests that she’s at least awake; she might do better if she didn’t have so many scenes opposite Jordan Bennett, who literally stops acting whenever he’s not in the dead center of the frame. Spotting his “when do we stop for lunch?” expression in the background is the Where’s Waldo of the final act.

So this cannot, alas, be a bad movie masterpiece. The best of those have commitment and vision, even if they’re expressed in ways that are peculiar, unskilled, excessive, or downright alien; too much of this is just trying to get to the 90-minute mark. But I can’t lie about how much fun I had watching it. In fact, when I put it on to get the cop tally, I was tempted to watch the whole thing all over again. A guy dies by being punched through the roof of a car!

Put it on with a friend. Grab a V8.

Ninja III: The Domination is streaming on Prime and Fubo.

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  1. My friend pointed out that this was apparently the only way Cannon could conceive of doing a female ninja movie: have her possessed by a man. ↩︎
  2. I mean, look at that title. That’s not the title of a real movie. Troy McClure should be in this. ↩︎