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Synopsis

Each year, three brothers Samuel, Jeffrey and Michael Douglas visits their Japanese grandfather, Mori Shintaro whom the boys affectionately refer to as Grandpa, for the summer. Mori is a highly skilled in the fields of Martial arts and Ninjutsu, and for years he has trained the boys in his techniques. After an organized crime ring proves to be too much for the FBI, it’s time for the 3 brother NINJAS! To use their martial arts skills, they team up to battle the crime ring and outwit some very persistent kidnappers! — imdb.com

Director

Original

Jon Turteltaub

After completing studies at Wesleyan University and a master’s degree from the USC film school, Turteltaub, son of veteran TV writer-producer Saul Turteltaub, gained some experience on the small screen. He worked on several ABC specials and pilots and was involved briefly with the Nickelodeon sitcom, “Salute Your Shorts”. In 1990 Turteltaub made his feature writing and directorial debut, “Think Big”, and followed up with another minor action comedy, “Driving Me Crazy” (1991), which he also co-wrote.

Turteltaub began a successful collaboration with Disney Studios and had a surprisingly popular film on his hands with “3 Ninjas” (1992), a routine but harmless children’s comedy adventure which marked a breakthrough collaboration between the US and South Korea in the production of a film. Action and comedy met once again for Turteltaub in his next film, the sleeper smash “Cool Runnings” (1992). Word of mouth helped sell this feel-good comedy about a Jamaican bobsled team, and the… read more

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Gap Wilds

28Oct11

Snyder is way better than John Kreese. When he mega-ninjitsu elbows that box with the missle in the warehouse scene, and then shows it off like the biggest dillhole in the world...Oh man, I'm pretty sure that's the pinnacle of the white man-corrupting-asian martial art cliche.

The King of Mediterranean Avenue

15Jul11

A Movie I must have watched a thousand times as a child. Something that could only be a product of the nineties when pop culture was just getting to the peak of commercialism and parents hadn't yet clued in to the affects this was having on their children. This film definitely fueled my imagination to think I was learned in the ways of Ninjitsu, trying to kick ass and take names on the playground.. unsuccessfully

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