American Ninja 4: The Annihilation

American Ninja 4: The Annihilation

1991 "The tradition lives on!"
American Ninja 4: The Annihilation
American Ninja 4: The Annihilation

American Ninja 4: The Annihilation

3.9 | 1h39m | R | en | Action

The two American Ninjas, Joe Armstrong and Sean Davidson, team up to do battle against a terrorist and his band of Ninjas.

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3.9 | 1h39m | R | en | Action , Thriller | More Info
Released: March. 08,1991 | Released Producted By: The Cannon Group , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

The two American Ninjas, Joe Armstrong and Sean Davidson, team up to do battle against a terrorist and his band of Ninjas.

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Cast

Michael Dudikoff , David Bradley , James Booth

Director

Ruth Strimling

Producted By

The Cannon Group ,

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Reviews

Leofwine_draca THE ANNIHILATION is the fourth instalment of the AMERICAN NINJA franchise and my first exposure to it too. It's notable for featuring in its cast both Michael Dudikoff, who starred in the first two films in the series, and David Bradley, who replaced him in the third. Bradley is kidnapped along with a bunch of commandos by a terrorist group led by a British warmonger. He also has an army of ninjas at his command. Dudikoff is called out of retirement to effect a rescue mission and does so with his usual deadly relish. This is a film which was shot in South Africa on a tight budget and it's ridiculously boring. The action scenes are non-exciting and the fight choreography is poor, a surprise as I enjoy a lot of 1990s-era action B-movies with their powerful kicks and punches. In the end I was merely waiting for the credits to roll. Even some of the Godfrey Ho ninja cheese-fests were more enjoyable than this. I'm going to pretend it doesn't exist.
utgard14 After the abysmal American Ninja 3, it seemed all hope was lost for fans of low-budget martial arts movies starring white guys. But like a phoenix rising from the ashes, this film would see the return of the one and ONLY American Ninja: Michael Dudikoff. Unfortunately, he doesn't return until about halfway through it. Still, it's Dudikoff's last hurrah as Joe Armstrong so it's worth seeing for that alone. Steve James is absent, which is unfortunate. The movie doesn't have the same feel as the first two. But that was generally true of most Cannon films of the time. The heyday of Golan/Globus was gone and Cannon by 1990 was just another cheap production company. Is this movie worth checking out for anybody who isn't an American Ninja or Dudikoff completist? Probably not.
callanvass People say American Ninja V is bad? That is 100% correct, but it's not as bad as this sequel is, I promise you. This movie takes itself completely serious, and suffers immensely for it; Cannon films have always been a hit and miss, but I've enjoyed a few of there films, mainly because they know how to incorporate humor into there movies. This sequel has none of that, and as a result, I had an experiencing that was very numbing. It doesn't help that the movie is very unexciting, with redundant fight scenes that fail to enliven the viewer. It's strange, because Dudikoff and Bradley do plenty of fighting, but none of it is that gratifying, other than a decent fight sequence in a bar, which is sadly too short. I will give credit to some brutal training sequences from the Ninja. We get an obstacle scene where the Ninjas have to walk over shards of glass, and avoid falling off into a pit of spikes, among other things. Watching a few of the guys fall on the glass shards made me cringe. The creativity was there to be used, but that was neglected for the most part. Michael Dudikoff phones it in. He appears around 45 minutes in, and doesn't have much dialog. He sleepwalks through everything, and does his thing with the fight scenes. It had potential for a decent team up between Dudikoff & Bradley, but they failed. Dudikoff says one word to Bradley in the entire movie and it was this. Armstrong (Dudikoff): Sean. You can find me at the school. David Bradley says in the movie that Dudikoff's character isn't much for words. No kidding! David Bradley is wooden as usual. His character gives way to Dudikoff for the most part in the second half, while Bradley is kidnapped. He is a great martial artist, I'll give him that. Jody Abrahams (Pango) is akin to Short Round from Temple of Doom, and that's not a compliment. Booth is actually a great baddie Final Thoughts: I hated this sequel. I'd rather watch American Ninja V three more times in lieu of go through this drivel again. The title is American Ninja 4: The Annihilation. Too bad it couldn't annihilate my boredom!2/10
Comeuppance Reviews When the evil Mulgrew (Booth) and his Japanese "Red Faction Army" (actually a bunch of ninjas) plan to take over the world, Sean Davidson (Bradley) snaps into action to stop their nefarious plan. Even though he's working with compatriots Carl (Alexandre) and local doctor Sarah (Stille), Mulgrew still seems to have the upper hand. To get out of this jam, they call in the REAL American Ninja, Joe Armstrong (Dudikoff). He was off working in the peace corps (funny, that doesn't sound like the Joe Armstrong we know and love), but you know what they say, if you want something done right...call in the American Ninja. Now with the power of Armstrong on their side, they can't lose...or can they? At this point, the American Ninja franchise was on life support. Part 3 was a slog, so Cannon must have figured, let's get the same director and do it again. Bad idea. It feels more like a Nu-Image movie, and the fact that Avi Lerner and some other future Nu-Image people were working behind the camera shows this must have been their training ground, which is unfortunate, but explains a lot. One of the things they did right was get James Booth as the main baddie. Recall that this is none other than Limehouse Willie himself. But since Cannon recycles plots all the time, what they should have done is dispense with all the nonsense herein (like extra characters named Pongo and the pseudo-Mad Max trappings and all that) and do a remake of Pray For Death, but with Dudikoff in the Sho Kosugi role. Then we'd have something. But by now it was the 90's, and things were on the downswing. This movie feels like a cash-in with very little, if any heart behind it. Even Dudikoff doesn't show up until 44 minutes into the movie, and he was probably prodded into it.The connection between Davidson and Armstrong in the movie is done with the most slender thread imaginable, to the point of it being laughable: "they're friends", we're told. Okay. How come we never heard about this so-called "friendship" before? Just this one throwaway utterance is supposed to explain why Armstrong would come to Lesotho, Africa and save the day. We've heard of bad writing, but that's just childishly pathetic. And it's bad enough that Steve James isn't in this movie - the supposed main star is David Bradley, who has so little screen presence, he's more like a blank face than an actual actor. If he didn't have eyes, a nose and a mouth, and instead just had a big question mark on his face, no one would notice. Plus he makes a lot of silly noises when fighting, and he's almost certainly wearing "guyliner" in some scenes, which is not manly. Did Cannon REALLY THINK Bradley was better than Dudikoff? It shows that maybe this series deserved to go down the tubes, because of poor decision making.In the action department, there are some decent battles, a bit of jungle action in the beginning, and maybe a couple of exploding guard towers/falls and possibly a heli as well. Plus there's the Prerequisite Torture, but it's really hard to care about the characters, except for Dudikoff. There's the time-honored ninja training camp, featuring the al-Qaida monkey bars, and Mortal Kombat-style obstacles. But on the bright side, at one point, in order to change clothes from his street gear to full-blown ninja, Dudikoff jumps into what can only be described as a "Ninja Hole". When he jumps in, he's classic Dudikoff. A split second later when he jumps out, he's all Ninja'd out. We liked the Ninja Hole. Maybe it's near the Ninja Cave from Cannon's Ninja III: The Domination (1984). If there are spots on earth where people can instantaneously turn into ninjas, we want to know about them.As happened with American Ninja 3, not to mention a lot of other movies, the song here is better than the movie. Eddie Ray Wolfe's "Fight Fire With Fire" is great and should have featured in the movie itself, not just the credits. Chalk it up to another bad decision. In all truth, there is very little "Annihilation" in this movie. Despite the presence of Dudikoff, we're sorry to report this is a dud.For more action insanity, please visit: www.comeuppancereviews.com