Ninja in the Dragon's Den

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Ninja in the Dragon's Den
Directed byCorey Yuen
Written byCorey Yuen
Ng See-yuen
Produced byNg See-yuen
StarringConan Lee
Hiroyuki Sanada
Hwang Jang-lee
Kwan Yung-moon
CinematographyAllan Poon
Music byChow Fu-liang
Tang Siu-lam
Distributed bySeasonal Film Corporation
Release date
  • 24 June 1982 (1982-06-24)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryHong Kong
LanguagesCantonese
Japanese
Box officeHK$7,587,002[1]

Ninja in the Dragon's Den (Chinese: 龍之忍者) is a 1982 Hong Kong martial arts film directed by Corey Yuen in his feature film directorial debut, who also writer with Ng See-yuen, who also producer. It stars Conan Lee, Hiroyuki Sanada and Hwang Jang-lee. The film was released on 24 June 1982.

Plot[edit]

In Japan of the Tokugawa Ieyasu period, a young ninja named Genbu wantonly kills samurai and other government officials, leaving his clan to face the blame. When they hunt him down, Genbu and his wife Akane sail to China both to escape their wrathful kinsmen and for Genbu to complete his revenge by finding the last man he holds responsible for his father's death.

That man, Fukusa, leads a peaceful life as a mirror maker under the name of Uncle Fu. He has a young protégé, Sun Jing, a smug martial artist who constantly tries to prove himself by taking up every opportunity to fight. Jing also constantly teases his lecherous servant Chee and takes few things very seriously. When he sees his surrogate father attacked, Jing immediately rushes to his aid, but after several clashes he finds out that he and the ninja are evenly matched.

It is revealed that Genbu's father was not killed by his clan members; he instead died as a hero in a rebellion years ago. Ashamed of his own cowardice in escaping to China following that attempted uprising, Fu makes peace with Genbu. But before their final encounter, Fu took poison to restore his honor by his own death. Fu asks Genbu to kill him in order to spare him the last agony, which promptly leads to a misunderstanding between Genbu and Jing. The two battle each other to the top of Jing's family temple and eventually settle their differences just in time to face The Magician, a spiritual boxer whose son Jing has insulted in the course of the movie.

The film ends with Jing and Genbu killing the Magician, with some unwitting assistance from Akane and Chee. The latter promptly tempts fate by claiming the better part of the credit for this victory, prompting Genbu and Jing to teach him a lesson.

Cast[edit]

  • Conan Lee – Sun Jing, one of the main protagonists and a smug but skilled Chinese martial artist. Called "Jay" in the English dub.
  • Hiroyuki Sanada – Genbu, one of the main protagonists and a skilled ninja from Japan. Called "Jinbu" in the English dub.
  • Tai Bo – Chee, Sun Jing's easygoing and lecherous servant. Called "Charlie" in the English dub.
  • Hiroshi Tanaka - Fukusa/"Uncle Fu", the man Genbu holds responsible for his father's death. Called "Fukuda"/"Uncle Lee" in the English dub.
  • Kaname Tsushima – Akane, Genbu's wife
  • Hwang Jang-lee – The Magician, a demon-spiritualistic kung fu master
  • Kwan Yung-moon – Sanchiro, the kashira (leader) of Genbu's ninja clan
  • Ma Chin-ku
  • Tien Feng
  • Wu Jiaxing
  • Chen Chin-hai
  • Cheung Chung-kwai
  • Chin Lung
  • Ho Hing-nam
  • Alan Lee Hoi-hing
  • Ng See-yuen
  • Peng Kang
  • Wang Yao
  • Wei Ping-ao – Doctor in Clinic (Chee's father)
  • Yukio Someno – Monk, a senior member of The Magician's cult

Reception[edit]

In December 2019, the film holds a Rotten Tomatoes rating of 76% based on 277 reviews.[2] Reviews specifically praise the film's dynamics, its unusual story, and its theme song.[3][4]

DVD release[edit]

On 25 March 2002, DVD was released by Hong Kong Legends in the United Kingdom in Region 2.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ninja in the Dragon's Den". Hong Kong Movie Database. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  2. ^ Rotten Tomatoes: Long Zhi Ren Zhe (Ninja in the Dragon's Den / Ninja Warriors) (retrieved 15 December 2019).
  3. ^ "Ninja In The Dragon’s Den (1982)". Ninjas All The Way Down. 21 April 2015 (retrieved 15 December 2019).
  4. ^ Illuminated Lantern: "Ninja in the Dragon's Den" (retrieved 15 December 2019).

External links[edit]