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Reviewed by Jon Barton
Gorosaurus
is a legend. For many reasons: he's brilliant with 3dmm, he
consistently pushes the process to new levels and he's not a bad
guy either. Therefore it's fitting that his career matches his
competence and the effortless cool he reeks of. So to open a
review the query has to be why exactly I'm bigging up the
director rather than the movie with such immediacy as other
reviews. The answer is put very simply, it is because of
Gorosaurus that Ninja Gaiden is a wondrous masterpiece. His
skills not only define the movie's principles and the awesome
spectacle of Ryu in all his hand-made glory, but he also
maintains and competently adds to what made Ninja Gaiden so
attractive as an existing franchise in the first place. Ninja
Gaiden is the pivotal movie that has churned irreconcilable
emotions clean out of me. Sadness, awe, joy, jealousy,
irrepressible urges to watch it again months after release...
etc. The last shot above all is my favourite ending shot, right
up there and floating a considerable height above GITS' sunset
and Bodily Functions' pan out of the hand. Which is ironic
considering I spent so much time rewinding to the beginning
of the film when the credits had rolled.
What Goro brings to Ninja Gaiden rather than taking away from it
is the sense of spirit that makes not necessarily NG in this
case but ninja movies as an institution so succinct. Ryu is a
hugely athletic behemoth of a protagonist, demonstrating
torment, anger and a real sense of himself as his story unfolds.
Bearing this in mind, Goro carefully crafts the elements of
drama alongside the action, proving the script is far more
intelligent than the average license tie-in. There's certainly a
great deal of satisfaction to be had out of this, as NG is
extremely capable of doing its job, telling a story. The movie
prides itself on this, and to compliment it further Goro has
raised the stakes to a degree of detail so coherent and stylised
thats its not even remotely surprising that NG is rarely
bettered. Most astounding is the animation itself. Ryu flips, he
ducks, he high-kicks, he rebounds, he recoils, as if someone has
made these moves on a set, Ryu really does move, both
exquisitely and believably. And only Goro could have made this
happen. What is at first a collection of conveniently placed
spheres with a pair of eyes suddenly becomes a member of a
living breathing world, a world in which Goro plays by his own
rules and rightfully so. Perhaps its not as enjoyable if you're
a lycan judging by an abundance of full moons, fabulous 2d style
and comic-book stand-offs, but nevertheless in this world, as
recognised by the nature of Ryu's violence, vengeance is in our
nature. Which, ultimately, makes Ryu a hugely sympathetic
character and one we can truly emphasise with. For character
development alone in a bladder friendly run-time, NG is visually
stunning. It's when Goro walks into the room and makes Ryu move,
creating an action to compliment the ninja that the film really
takes off on an emotional level.
What I love about Ninja Gaiden, what I really love about it is
its unconvoluted talent for making my emotions crumble. Above
all else its telling a story, but it's because its telling such
a tale that makes it so epic for the viewer. At the end I was
saddened by what had happened, but at the same time redeemed and
relieved by the events. It made me happy and it made me sad on
different levels. Which made that much more of an impact when I
first saw it when released because ninja movies just didn't fit
in with my taste. If Goro aimed to make a film for fans, he has
succeeded. However, triumphantly if he aimed to make a film to
turn viewers into fans, he succeeded to a far greater extent.
You've got to respect Goro for that. And Ninja Gaiden is a
unique blend of different styles coming together to produce an
unparalleled form: an epic story dealing with the messages of
how powerful we can be and bring ourselves to be, and how last
stands come as a result of falling down. What adds to NG's
substance is that the end shot of the grave adds to the sense of
potentially falling back down again, and that peace has in fact
not been found. Something no doubt to be left for The Dragon
Born to fulfill.
My main gripe with the film is at first it seems longwinded (but
certainly not the second time), and while the film is
undoubtedly sweet and choosing not to inevitably outstay its
welcome during the showdown, by the end the audience is
distraught. Goro was in more danger of understaying his welcome
with Ninja Gaiden. I know I definitely wanted more. I was greedy
for more. Thus when the credits came I remained silent, choosing
to watch the film again and cry in a corner later. And its with
this thought that I eagerly anticipate the coming of the sequel,
which with Goro's skill not only as a director but as an auteur,
is unlikely to fail. As sure thing as a spidey sequel, it's
unlikely to flop too, as appreciation for the film is littered
everywhere and of course clones have been tried before (let us
try to forget Carl Arnold's soiled attempt). So on that upnote
of anticipation, I'll end the review and humbly bide my time,
waiting to hug and kiss Goro upon The Dragon Born's release. And
that's not a plug. That's a fan talking.
Ninja Gaiden is, much like Ryu's carefully constructed and now
iconic attacking silhouette over the full moon, absolutely
phenomenally brilliant. It's my favourite 3dmm movie of all
time, and put quite simply unlike the rest of the review: it's
fucking great.
10/10
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