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Ninja is a 2009 American martial arts/action thriller film directed by Isaac Florentine and starring Scott Adkins, Tsuyoshi Ihara and Mika Hijii.

Casey Bowman (Scott Adkins) is an American orphan who was adopted into a martial arts dojo in Japan. Because of his perseverance and desire to master bushido, he earns the respect of the dojo's sensei, Takeda, and his daughter Namiko (Mika Hijii). However, the dojo's top student Masazuka (Tsuyoshi Ihara) becomes increasingly bitter over Namiko's friendship with Casey until one morning, during a sparring match, he loses his temper and nearly kills Casey by throwing a katana at him. In defense, Casey scars Masazuka below his right eye. As a result of his actions, Masazuka is banished from the dojo by the sensei.

Years later, Masazuka becomes an assassin under contract with an American conglomerate called Temple Industries, which itself runs an underground criminal cult known as "The Ring". He returns to his former dojo and claims in vain the sensei's succession as sōke, but the sensei refuses to oblige. Anticipating an invasion by Masazuka, the sensei sends Casey and Namiko to New York to guard an old chest called the Yoroi Bitsu, which contains the suit and weapons of the ninja who started the dojo.

While in New York, Casey and Namiko seek out a friend of Sensei Takeda, Professor Garrison, to help them hide the Yoroi Bitsu. However, they end of becoming framed for the murder of Garrison and are forced to fight off Masazuka and members of the ring as well as trying to avoid the NYPD. Eventually, the duo are brought in to the station for questioning by the police, but while separated, Namiko is kidnapped by Masazuka.

After escaping from the police station, Casey tracks down a contact number for Masazuka and sets up a meeting, ostensibly to exchange the girl for the Yoroi Bitsu. This sets up a final showdown between Casey and Masazuka.

A sequel Ninja: Shadow of a Tear, also starring Scott Adkins was released in 2013.


Ninja contains examples of the following tropes:

  • The Ace: Casey. It's what Scott Adkins does.
  • Action Girl: Namiko, resident bo-staff expert. She's also pretty good with a bow and arrows.
  • Arch-Enemy: Casey Bowman has Masazuka, his Rival Turned Evil from his student days, who killed their master and wants to take over their ninja clan.
  • Ax-Crazy: Masazuka, full stop. Nearly kills Casey the first chance he gets and slices through his entire dojo to claim the Yaroi Bitsu.
  • Badass in Distress: After being kidnapped by Masakuza, Namiko goes from Action Girl to one of these. Justified in that her kidnapper is equally trained and better armed.
  • Black-and-White Morality: Played Straight. Casey is the hero and Masazuka is the villain.
  • Big Bad: Masazuka, rogue student of the Takeda school. Casey has to go through the Ring to get to Masazuka.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The contents of the Yaroi Bitsu are used by Casey in the final fight against Masazuka.
    • Also the reference to how the sword of the ninja can kill but give life as well turns out to be significant. There's another vial of the antidote for the ninja poison hidden in the sword's hilt, which ends up saving Namiko's life.
  • Conservation of Ninjutsu: Mooks don't stand a chance, but the fight with Masazuka is a good one.
  • Cyber Ninja: Masazuka's arsenal is thoroughly modern, including nightvision goggles and submachine guns, but he still prefers his sword. Justified, his services don't come cheap.
  • Dragon with an Agenda: An odd heroic example with Casey, who uses his time in New York to search for his missing mother. She died years ago. Played straighter with Masazuka, who calls in a help from The Ring to help capture the Yaroi Bitsu.
  • Duel to the Death: It's Casey vs. Masazuka in the final battle with swords and Masakuza loses his head, making it a literal duel to the death.
  • Evil, Inc.: Temple Industries, which employs Masazuka to cover up its dirty deeds. The entire Board of Directors is shown to be in on this.
  • Fanservice: Casey is introduced practising his ninja skills while shirtless. The fact he's played by the hunk and athletic Scott Adkins helps a lot.
  • Gorn: Yep.
  • Info Dump: Sensei Takeda explains the history of the Yaroi Bitsu via inner monologue early on in the movie.
  • Improvised Weapon: Namiko improvises a bo staff out of someone's crutches.
  • Job Title: It's a movie called Ninja that centers around a heroic ninja.
  • Katanas Are Just Better: Masazuka uses some modern weapons, but in his Duel to the Death with Casey they use katanas.
  • Lady of War: Namiko, given the fact that she is an Action Girl who favors a bo staff, is not overly sexualized in the movie, and is the daughter of the revered Takeda.
  • Love Interest: Namiko graduates to Casey's wife in the sequel.
  • MacGuffin: the Yaroi Bitsu. Justified, as it comes directly down from the founder of the dojo and represents the authenticity of the sensei who possesses it. Plus, its contents are just as deadly as it was hundreds of years ago.
  • McNinja: Casey. Averted, as he was raised and trained by a legitimate ninja master in Japan.
  • Martial Arts Movie: In typical Scott Adkins fashion...flashy, but no wires.
  • Mighty Whitey: Played completely straight. Casey is an American orphaned and raised by a Japanese ninja master. As such, he is trained in the way of the ninja and eventually, after avenging his master, becomes the dojo's sensei.
  • Mook Horror Show: Played absolutely straight when Matsazuka goes on an unstoppable killing spree. May it be the Mafia, the students of his former school, the police, the criminal organization he works for...
  • Mugged for Disguise: Matsazuka stealthily kills a bespectacled civilian in an airport bathroom, taking his victim's flight tickets, clothes and glasses to sneak his way back to New York.
  • Night-Vision Goggles: Matsazuka puts on one of these in the darkened police station fight scene and the final battle, allowing him to sneak up on faceless extras and kill everyone of them with ease.
  • Ninja: Averted...just kidding.
  • Off with His Head!: Sensei Takeda is beheaded by Masazuka and Masazuka is beheaded by Casey.
  • Old Master: Sensei Takeda.
  • One-Word Title: It's a film called Ninja.
  • Opening Scroll: Gives super brief history lesson on ninjas. Establishes Casey as part of an ancient tradition.
  • Plot Armor: Throwing his sword did not work for Masazuka in this movie because Casey was the hero.
  • Police Are Useless: Masazuka mops the floor with most of a precinct. Casey and Nanako take a few cops out as well.
  • Psycho for Hire: Masazuka really enjoys his work.
  • A Pupil of Mine Until He Turned to Evil: Masazuka, from Sensei Takeda's perspective. He was expelled from Takeda's dojo for his bad behavior.
  • Rage Breaking Point: Casey generally dispatches the mooks coming after him efficiently and without visible agitation... but when two of them start beating up Namiko he completely flips out and makes absolutely , gruesomely, throw-one-under-the-train-snap-the-other's-neck, certain they are dead.
  • Railroad Tracks of Doom: The furst assassin Casey fights on the subway gets thrown through the train's windows... heads-first into a second incoming train.
  • Samurai: Makes an appearance while Sensei Takeda is Dreaming of Times Gone By during his early info dump.
  • Seppuku: Casey decapitating Masazuka seems meant to evoke the image.
  • Stock Ninja Weaponry: The Yaroi Bitsu, again. Masazuka uses more modern variations.
  • Sword Fight: Several.
  • You Killed My Master: Sensei Takeda's assassination at the hands of Masazuka is what really gets the plot in motion.
  • Super Window Jump: Casey makes one of these through the glass in the interrogation room at the police station.
  • You Can't Go Home Again: An NYPD detective who took Casey in after the train fight, and whose life the latter saved during Masazuka's rampage at the police station, tells him to leave and never come back after the dust settles.
  • Would Hit a Girl: Mooks in the movie have no problem hitting Namiko. Justified because she is a ninja herself.
  • Zerg Rush: The Ring has plenty of Mooks for Casey and Nanako to run through.


Ninja: Shadow of A Tear contains examples of the following tropes:

  • Asshole Victim: Goro didn't actually kill Namiko but, being a murderous drug lord, it's fair to say he won't be missed by too many people.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Casey finds out the truth behind Namiko's death and kills the person responsible but that person was Nakabara who Casey clearly knew for a long time and was friendly with; also, in addition to Namiko Lucas, Nakabara's student who idolized Casey, was also the victim of his sensei's scheme to frame Goro. The last scene of the film is Casey dropping the medallion he bought for Namiko into a pond where she told him she was pregnant and walking away towards uncertain future.
  • Broken Pedestal: Casey hits this after losing his temper while sparring with a young student who had met and idolized him before.
    • Nakabara hits it in the third act after Casey realizes he was the one who killed Namiko to get Casey to eliminate a rival drug dealer.
  • Elite Mooks: Casey slaughters Goro's soldiers with ease, but the one played by Tim Man (the fight choreographer) gives him a good run for his money.
  • Death Glare: Casey unleashes a couple when he's about to throw down.
  • Dressing as the Enemy: Casey infiltrates an enemy camp by disguising himself as one of their soldiers, before leaving behind a grenade on a propane tank killing around ten enemies by surprise.
  • The Lost Lenore: Namiko, who is now Casey's wife and pregnant with his child, dies unceremoniously early in the sequel, triggering Casey's Roaring Rampage of Revenge.
  • Made of Iron: At one point Casey is tortured by Myanmar police by having hot iron applied to his lower leg, resulting in a pretty sever burn. The burn slows him down not at all.
  • Ragnarök Proofing: Not as extreme an example as some, but supplies buried during the 1940s are still usable in the 2010s.
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Casey's wife and unborn child are killed by ninjas. Casey, also a ninja, takes revenge.
  • Shirtless Scene: There's...quite a few.
  • Torture Is Ineffective: The Myanmar police torture Casey with hot irons on his feet and legs, unaware that his ninja training allows him to walk over hot coals.
  • Wacky Cravings: Namiko's is for chocolate...and seaweed.

  • Wicked Cultured: Goro is a pretty contemplative sort for a vicious crime lord. He even quotes a poem by Matsuo Bashō moments before facing Casey in a duel:
    Summer grass/All that remains/Of a soldier's dreams.
  • "X" Marks the Spot: The Japanese buried caches of ninja gear and weaponry in certain cemetaries in Burma during WWII.

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