The Black Ninja

The Black Ninja
Directed by Clayton Prince
Produced by Parris Z. Moore
Written by Clayton Prince
Starring Clayton Prince
Carla Brothers
Nicky DeMatteo
Yuki Matsuzaki
Heather Hunter
John Canada Terrell
Michael Chance
Cinematography Brendan Flynt
Edited by Michael Rector
Production
company
Distributed by MTI Home Video
Singa Home Entertainment
Release dates
  • January 14, 2003 (2003-01-14)
Running time
91 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Black Ninja is a 2003 American martial arts action film written, directed and starring Clayton Prince, and featuring Carla Brothers, Nicky DeMatteo, Yuki Matsuzaki, Heather Hunter, John Canada Terrell and Michael Chance. The film has been called a modern-day Blaxploitation film, however, it received very poor reviews from critics. After a limited theatrical release, it went straight-to-DVD and distributed worldwide in January 2003. The sequel Black Ninja: Take Two was released as a direct download February 2015.

Plot

Maliq Ali (Clayton Prince) is a defense attorney whose guilt over freeing guilty criminals, and the death of his family, leads him to become a costumed ninja vigilante who stalks these same criminals at night. After refusing to defend Tony Fanelli (Nicky DeMatteo), a small-time mobster accused of murder, he finds himself involved in protecting the only witness, Tracey Allen (Carla Brothers), from Fanelli's hired thugs. While protecting this young woman, he is confronted by The Red Ninja (Yuki Matsuzaki), a Japanese assassin, who years before killed his family rather than pay Ali for defending him.

Cast

Production

Primarily financed by Clayton Prince, filming began in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and ended after two weeks. Critics noted that the rush to finish the film drastically affected its overall quality, much of which could have been cleaned up post-production editing, leaving it looking "unfinished and more like an amateur, student film". An hour-long "Making of" documentary was produced and included on the DVD following its release. It gave a "behind the scenes" look on the set of a low-budget film and featured many of the cast and crew voicing their opinions on the lack of opportunity in the film industry in regards to race.

Reception

The Black Ninja was given a limited theatrical release on November 2, 2002, and distributed worldwide on DVD on January 14, 2003. The film was heavily criticized for its apparent lack of martial arts choreography and generally poor quality of the story, acting and cinematography.

Sources

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