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Enter the Ninja

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Arrives Monday, Apr 27
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Description

U.S. Army veteran Cole (Franco Nero) was one of the few Westerners to truly master the stealth battle art of Ninjutsu. He applied his deadly skills when he journeyed to the Philippines to help out an old friend (Alex Courtney) whose farm was targeted for an oil grab... but the bad guys countered by ringing in a ninja master (Shô Kosugi) of their own. Golan/Globus actioner co- stars Susan George, Christopher George, and Zachi Noy as "The Hook." 99 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English DTS 5.1, DTS Lossless stereo Subtitles: English; audio commentary; theatrical trailer. Two-disc set.

Genre: Action & Adventure, Action & Adventure/Martial Arts


Format: 4K


Contributor: Alex Courtney, Christopher George, Constantine Gregory, Dale Ishimoto, Franco Nero, Joonee Gamboa, Menahem Golan, Sho Kosugi, Susan George, Will Hare, Yoram Globus, Zachi Noy See more


Language: English


Runtime: 1 hour and 39 minutes


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.54 x 6.77 x 5.35 inches; 3.36 ounces


Director ‏ : ‎ Menahem Golan


Media Format ‏ : ‎ 4K


Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 39 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ December 2, 2025


Actors ‏ : ‎ Alex Courtney, Christopher George, Franco Nero, Sho Kosugi, Susan George


Producers ‏ : ‎ Menahem Golan, Yoram Globus


Studio ‏ : ‎ Kl Studio Classics


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • 80s rock!
Love this movie,
Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2026 by Jarod Heckel

  • Great ninja movie
One of the greatest ninja movies
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2026 by Eugene O'Brien

  • A good nostalgic blast from the past
Enter the Ninja is the first of the Cannon Films' Ninja Trilogy which consists of Enter the Ninja, Revenge of the Ninja, and Ninja III: The Domination. It is really only considered a trilogy because the same production company made all of the films, and real ninjutsu practitioner Sho Kosugi appeared in each of the movies (although he played completely different roles in each movie). The basic plot of Enter the Ninja is that a mercenary named Cole, played by Franco Nero, is trained as a ninja in Japan. The movie opens at the completion of his ninja training in a great action sequence. One of his fellow students, Hasegawa, played by Sho Kosugi, resented having an American trained as a ninja, which sets up the end of the movie. The main part of the story starts when Cole goes to visit his war buddy Frank Landers (played by Alex Courtney) and his newlywed wife Mary Ann Landers (played by Susan George), who are the owners of a large piece of farming land in the Philippines. Cole soon finds that the Landers are being repeatedly harassed by a local land baron, Charles Venarius, the wealthy CEO of Venarius Industries, in order to get them to sell their property because, unbeknownst to them, a large oil deposit is located beneath their land. Most of the middle portion of the movie involves Cole beating up the local henchmen Venarius has hired to bully and coerce the Landers. At the end of the movie, we get the classic ninja-versus-ninja battle between Cole and Hasegawa. For those who get the Blu-Ray, the A/V quality is good, but not great. It is much better quality than the picture and sound on the VHS, which is how many of us in our mid-forties or older saw the movie when we were kids. But, it did not get a high-quality restoration and transfer given that it was an independent 1980s martial arts film. There are no extras on the blu-ray aside from the trailer for the movie. Overall, this movie is a blast from the past for those of us who saw it as kids. Chances are, if you were into martial arts at all in the late 70s through the early to mid-80s, you probably loved this movie when the horrible acting and cheesy fight sequences (and Nero's 70s porn stache) were easily ignored. It is kind of hilarious to watch Nero in the fight scenes in which he is not in the ninja costume because it is clear he had zero martial arts training or skill. But, when the stunt guy is in the costume and fighting with Kosugi, those are good fight sequences. Kosugi was still pretty green as an actor (not that he was ever a great actor), but he could pull off the menacing bad guy very well. It does have one sex scene (which is pretty tame) and a lot of violence (but even that is tame by today's standards), as well as its fair share of stupid comedy (including a guy with a hook for a hand). You definitely have to take this movie for what it is, and as long as you do not expect more from it than being a cheesy action movie with ninjas, it is enjoyable. If you are looking for an academy award winner, this is definitely not something you will be interested in. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2022 by SpeedReader

  • I was really entertained with this movie.
This is an action packed martial arts movie.
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2026 by Peach

  • Awesome
I watch it and love it.
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2026 by Itrail Rael

  • Great movie, real nostalgia
Excellent seller, great communication. Well packed product, fast shipping. *****
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2025 by Gacsályi Csaba

  • The Great Films Of The 80s
Amazing film of the 80s love those days, so glad I could get this in Blu-ray, thank you.
Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2025 by Chris Nicholas Bushell

  • Not the best Ninja offering, as others have stated on here, but enjoyable enough as a late-night TV presentation...
I like Susan George (but she is clothed throughout in case you're wondering) and Franco ("I was the original Django and you weren't!") Nero in their roles, respectively, but essentially "Enter the Ninja" is no "Enter the Dragon"--while the Lee film is (to my taste) overly praised, it is more fun in tone than this film, an early entry in the genre directed by (who else?) Menahem Golan, the genius who brought us pictures such as the "Death Wish" sequels, "Superman IV: the Quest for Peace," and even "Delta Force" (starring Chuck Norris--who else?). Even if you were a little girl when this film was first released, you desperately wanted to become a ninja after watching it. But that was eons ago, and now that we have some critical perspective with which to view this heap with, it becomes dreadfully obvious that this script is rather a D.O.A. affair, and that the action is spread a bit thin for anyone's taste (other than the ending, I wouldn't deem this one overly violent either). There are a few too many comical moments involving Christopher George and his butt boys (I think these scenes are inappropriately humorous for a movie that is supposed to get us energized and ready for action--personally, I enjoyed George a lot more in the movie "Grizzly"). I am a card-carrying fan of "The Octagon" and pictures like that one, but "Enter the Ninja" has a rushed feel, in which the David Gurfinkel (that's GURFINKEL, not GARFUNKEL!!!---imagine how many times this man had to tell people this when applying for jobs) cinematography is lost, and the choppy editing by Mark Goldblatt makes the action feel a bit too fearful of its own power (I hate to see this happen, and it happens in every American movie junk-food action classic, from Seagal's "Marked for Death" to Schwarzenegger's "Commando"). In any case, though, it's a good curio, something that should have been available on VHS tape at K-MART stores back in the late 80's (but it probably wasn't). The MGM Limited Edition (don't make me laugh) DVD issue is passable enough but probably not substantial in any way as a releasing "event" (although for an old heap, it doesn't look too bad). The sound is alright and the image is good enough for who it's for (by the way, who is this movie for nowadays?). Best to watch this one when your reasoning is at its lowest reaches. C ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2015 by Leslie Karen Rigsbey

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