#american ninja 1985
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
On June 28, 1986, American Ninja debuted in Italy.
#american ninja 1985#american ninja#sam firstenberg#steve james#action thriller#action movie#tcm underground#cannon films#ninja movies#ninja#movie art#art#drawing#movie history#pop art#modern art#pop surrealism#cult movies#portrait#cult film#italy
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Created by Daredevil, Avengers, and Indiana Jones comics writer Dave Michelinie, Lynxana the Huntress was an original character created for the 1985 Marvel STAR Comics line as a villain, an amoral, mercenarial "failed Thundercat" who had their ninja like martial training, strength, and courage, but who washed out and became a bounty hunter.
Gradually, however, Lynxana was reminded of her former ideals and Thundercat chivalry, and eventually teamed with the others temporarily, though she went her own way as she valued her personal freedom.
Lynxana had no appearances apart from the 3 issue arc that introduced her...in the US, that is. Thundercats had strangely durable popularity in the UK, which caused Marvel UK to make Thundercats comics well past the point you'd think, with the last UK issue printed in 1991 (!). Her return story was penned by 2000 AD's Simon Furman, yes, as in Judge Dredd Simon Furman.
(Note the difference in coloring technique. UK comics use "solid" coloring, whereas American comics used the less expensive "dot" or four-color method.)
What's the current legal status of this character? That is unknown, but in the typical work for hire license, Marvel owns any character they create for a licensed series, which is why, for example, Marvel-created original characters in Micronauts like Bug have returned in the proper Marvel Universe, whereas toy characters that were part of the Micronauts license like Prince Acroyear have not, or why Circuitbreaker, the anti-robot bigot enemy of the Transformers created for the Marvel Comic, showed up in the Marvel Secret Wars series. it depends entirely on the specific text of the work for hire contract, but the most likely scenario is that the rights to Lynxana the Hunter are still at Marvel.
Hmm. I wonder if Marvel knows they may have the rights to their very own Thundercat.
275 notes
·
View notes
Text
Cartoons With Continuity (Overarching, Season-Long Arcs, Partial, Multi-Part Eps, Etc.) That Came Out Before Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005)
1980s
• G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1983)
• The Transformers (1984)
• Thundercats (1985)
• The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo (1985)
• Jem and the Holograms (1985)
• The Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers (1986)
• Ducktales (1987)
1990s
• The Pirates of Dark Water (1991)
• The Legend of Prince Valiant (1991)
• The Adventures of Tintin (1991)
• Batman: The Animated Series (1992)
• X-Men: the Animated Series (1992)
• The Animals of Farthing Wood (1993)
• Exo Squad (1993)
• Sonic the Hedgehog (1993)
• ReBoot (1994)
• Iron Man (1994)
• Gargoyles (1994)
• Spider-Man (1994)
• Beast Wars: Transformers (1996)
• Todd McFarlane's Spawn (1997)
• Men in Black: The Series (1997)
• Princess Sissi (1997)
• Silver Surfer (1998)
• Batman Beyond (1999)
• Roswell Conspiracies: Aliens, Myths and Legends (1999)
• Cybersix (1999)
Early 2000s
• Jackie Chan Adventures (2000)
• Chris Colorado (2000)
• As Told by Ginger (2000)
• Justice League (2001)
• He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (2002)
• Codename: Kids Next Door (2002)
• Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003)
• Teen Titans (2003)
• Code Lyoko (2003)
• Lilo & Stitch: The Series (2003)
• Xiaolin Showdown (2003)
• Star Wars: Clone Wars (2003)
• Winx Club (2004)
• Danny Phantom (2004)
• Justice League Unlimited (2004)
• The Venture Bros. (2004)
• Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce Go! (2004)
• W.I.T.C.H. (2004)
• American Dragon Jake Long (2005)
#cartoons#avatar the last airbender#disney's gargoyles#teen titans#fandom#my posts#I know that I missed some so...#wip.
40 notes
·
View notes
Text
kawajiri #10
kawajiri #10 is VAMPIRE HUNTER D: BLOODLUST
i watched the dub which is actually the way this was meant to be seen (it was made specifically for american distribution because ninja scroll was so big over here, kawajiri one of those directors who's way bigger in america than his home country. shinichiro watanabe type guy), but i don't think it fits this too well. it's not exactly the cyber city oedo dub, which is just gleefully being the trashiest thing imaginable, but it feels a bit pulpier than this story needs. this is a pulpy story, but the characters shouldn't know that, and it isn't as pulpy as this dub is! i may just be too much of a weeb but the japanese dub feels way better to me. it's not bad or anything, just not as good. it doesn't help that they keep saying d is a dunpeal instead of dhampir, which is a problem. sometimes the people who made a thing making demands for how a proper noun gets translated are just flat out wrong. arucard, moonbeam butterfly, things of that nature
anyways, this is the coolest god damn movie i have seen in my life. every single frame is dripping in atmosphere and every scene has an insane new thing and somehow it all comes together perfectly in what i can only really describe as a miracle movie. the opening scene is one of the best depictions ever of some Classic Dracula Shit (invading a victorian looking town, destroying the symbols of the church, kidnapping maidens, looking classy as fuck) and then the next shot is of a fucking cathedral space station. what a perfect introduction to this movie, which is the perfect mix of classic gothic horror and gonzo scifi fantasy. vampires as tragic romantic figures but still horrifying monsters. cool shadow demons, mad max tanks with cross shaped headlights, old west saloons, the rusted ruins of oil refineries, gothic jewel encrusted spaceships launching from the coolest haunted castle imaginable.
this movie has some of the best hand painted backgrounds i've ever seen. it's a style that was super common in this pre-digital era of anime, but while those backgrounds are always beautiful they don't always mesh perfectly with the actual moving animation. if you aren't careful the top layer will look flat compared to the lush backgrounds. a good example of this is actually the og vampire hunter d movie, which is gorgeous but also kind of janky at times because of this problem. it's especially unfortunate there because it's trying to capture the inimitable yoshitaka amano's art, which is tricky under the best of circumstances and basically impossible while under the constraints that movie was. but this movie avoids this by having everything, characters included, drawn with the appropriate amount of lavish detail to fit together without either ever feeling out of place. it isn't an exact replica of amano's art he did for the novels this is based on, but it captured the vibe very well and it's super close. this movie isn't really innovating outside of its style, and even the aesthetic is just the kind of thing kawajiri had been doing since wicked city ramped up to the most extreme version it's possible to do, but that doesn't matter. it's got solid ideas executed well with some of the best visual presentation i've ever seen
AND it has no gross horny sexual assault scenes! which is really something considering the novel this is based on apparently does have those, they just got cut out for the movie. extremely glad that's the case, this movie has killer vibes and it would suck massively if i had to even have that as a caveat like the og 1985 vampire hunter d movie, much less the movie ruining levels of it shit like ninja scroll had.
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
Hiroo Onoda : the real life Last Ninja 🥷🏻
After going to the Kyoto Samurai Ninja Museum, I realized that the movie American Ninja (1985) that I love watching, features a character that is actually inspired by an actual one, Hiroo Onoda.
In the movie, John Fujioka, plays a lone Japanese soldier who survived and lived in the forest in the Philippines since World War 2, as he wasn't aware that the war was over. Until he met an orphan, played by Michael Dudikoff, that he realized what happened. He adopted the child and taught him Ninjitsu, to pass his teachings.
In history, Hiroo Onoda survived in the Philippines till 1974, thinking that his country is still at war and refused to believe flyers saying the war was over, thinking it was allied propaganda. Upon learning of this, his former commander flew from Japan to meet him to relieve him of his duty, where he surrendered on 10 March 1974.
The reason he was able to survived that long and evade capture by the allies is because he was a real Ninja. The TIMES magazine attributed to this when he passed away in 2014 at the age of 91.
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
Going to work on turning this into a master post of prompts I’ve made. Prompts I like, and things I alike and would be willing to write things on.
My own Posts. Superwoman AU
Super Phantom DCxDP
Future Son?! DCxDP
Super X-man
DND Young Justice
DPxDC A Tale of Two Jacks
Age Reversal
Teenage Mutant Ninja Wizard
Alien PETA
Young Justice Spider
The Year of the Dragon
Baby bat, Phantom, and the X-men
Superwoman Kara
Spleen Surprise DCxDP
Benders in DC (ATLA x justice league)
Random OC Villain Character not connected to any existing media
Revival Brothers DPxDC part 1 part 2 part 3
X Phantom
Not mine but I am invested in.
Time Winder. Connected to Time Travel Teen Parents
Re-alive ray superson
Pack less misunderstandings
Thermon aka Ghost Pokémon
Red Arrow’s Ghost
Halfa universal clone donor
Snookums the kryptonian guard dog!
Niche unheard of crossover ideas. (Some not even a one shot on ao3🥲
Wild Kratts x How to Train Your Dragon
Batclan in Redwall
Series and media I like or liked and enjoy fan discussion and fics on (may include Cartoons, Books, Movies or Games.)1 How to train your dragon2 Transformers Prime (cartoons, NOT the movies)3 Avatar the last air-bender. (Not including Korra)4 Teenage mutant ninja turtles (cartoon series)5 Spectacular Spider-man (cartoon Series)6 Redwall (cartoon and book series)7 Pokemon (cartoon and game)8 Sonic the hedgehog (cartoons, and comics.)9 Justice league (the 1990 animated series. NOT the live action movies) And batman animated. 10 My Little pony FIM (G4 cartoon) 11 Marvel Cinematic Universe (before Disney bought it)12 Wings of Fire (books)13 Ben 10 (cartoon)14 Star wars (past liked not present)15 Star trek original series (past liked not present)16 Neo-pets ( Toys. great concept but not the best executed game)17 Kungfu Panda (cartoons)18 Teen titans (original Cartoon, not go)19 Rangers apprentice (books)20 Kim possible (cartoon)21 Lilo and stitch (cartoon)22 American Dragon (Cartoon)23 Big Hero 6 (cartoon) 24 Guardians of Ga’Hoole (books. don’t bother with the movie)25 Epic (animated movie by Blue Sky studios)26 Atlantis the lost Empire (Disney cartoon)27 Big bang theory (TV)28 Lord of the Rings (movies and books.)29 Dragon Quest (games)30 Wild Krats (cartoon)31 The Fluppy Dogs (cartoon)32 Zootopia (cartoon)33 Nelvana Care bears (cartoon specifically the 1985 to 1988 series)34 Last man standing (what can I say he reminds me of my dad)35 Bones (TV)36 Warrior cats. (books only read up until power of three arc)37 Flash (TV)38 Home improvement (TV)39 Steven Universe (cartoon. concept was good but poorly executed story)40 Phineas and Ferb (cartoons)41 Milo Murphy’s law (cartoon)42 Amphibia (cartoon)43 Emperors new groove. (cartoon)44 Harry Potter (books)45 Chronicles of Narnia (books)46 Dinotopia (TV movie, and books)47 Encanto (cartoon)48 Jane and the dragon. (cartoon)49 Gravity falls (cartoon)50 Swat Kats (cartoon)51 Chip and Dale rescue rangers (cartoon) 52 Ducktales (cartoon) 53 Prince of Egypt. (Animated movie) 54 Danny Phantom. (Cartoon) 55 Puss in Boots (dreamworks movies)56 Young Justice (cartoon have not read the comics) 57 Batman Wayne family adventures (web comic. 58 Tower dungeon farmer (web comic)
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
HALLOWEEN-A-THON 2024
New viewings with an asterisk. 1. Dead of Night (1977)* 2. Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (theatrical version) 3. An American Werewolf in London (theatrically) 4. The Wolf Man (1941) 5. The Curse of Frankenstein 6. A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master 7. The Legend of Hell House 8. A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child 9. Son of Frankenstein 10. Snowbeast (1977) 11. Inferno (1980) 12. The Beyond 13. The Terror (1963) 14. Phantasm: RaVager (The For Rory Edition) 15. Halloween: Resurrection 16. Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein 17. Fright Night (1985) 18. Friday the 13th (1980) 19. Friday the 13th, Part 2 20. Hellraiser (1987) 21. Poltergeist (1982) 22. The Haunting (1963) 23. Spirits of the Dead 24. The House That Dripped Blood 25. The Predator 26. Silver Bullet 27. The Face of Fu Manchu 28. Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers 29. Phantasm: OblIVion 30. Sleepaway Camp 31. Wes Craven's New Nightmare 32. Witch Hunt* 33. Evil Eye* 34. Ninja Dragon Sword Legend OVA* 35. Halloween Kills (The This Is How Halloween Ends Edition) 36. White Zombie 37. Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II 38. The Reptile 39. The Plague of the Zombies 40. The Wicker Man (1973) 41. The Lair of the White Worm 42. The Shining (1980) 43. The Gorgon 44. Dracula's Daughter 45. Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein* 46. The Monster Squad 47. Halloween (2018; The Back in Shape Edition) 48. Son of Dracula 49. Amityville: The Awakening* 50. Gremlins 2: The New Batch 51. Hellraiser: Inferno* 52. Mr. Sardonicus 53. Dracula, Prince of Darkness 54. Creepshow (104-minute TV edition) 55. Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers 56. Halloween III: Season of the Witch 57. Prince of Darkness (theatrical version) 58. Prince of Darkness (TV Version) 59. The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas 60. Fangs of the Living Dead 61. They Live 62. Jason Lives: Friday the 13th, Part VI 63. Late Night with the Devil* 64. Bram Stoker's Count Dracula (1970) 65. Dracula Has Risen from the Grave 66. The Werewolf vs. the Vampire Woman 67. Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell 68. The City of the Dead 69. House of Frankenstein (1944) 70. The Masque of the Red Death (1964) 71. Black Sunday (1960) 72. The Devil Rides Out 73. The Keep 74. Beetlejuice 75. Hellraiser: Hellseeker 76. Trap* 77. Friday the 13th, Part V: A New Beginning (TV Version) 78. Phantasm 79. Freddy vs. Jason 80. Halloween II (1981; TV Version) 81. Horror of Dracula (uncut version) 82. The Seventh Victim 83. Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers (Producer's Cut) 84. The Mummy (1959) 85. Bride of Frankenstein 86. Taste the Blood of Dracula 87. Halloween (1978) 88. Halloween II (1981; theatrical version) 89. Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
A New Wallpaper Nickelodeon Backgrounds 2025
Nickelodeon, formerly known as Pinwheel, or C-3, (often shortened to Nick) is an American pay television network owned by Paramount Global through its Paramount Media Networks division. The channel's programming is mainly aimed at children and adolescents aged 8 to over, and primarily consists of original first-run television series, along with occasional broadcasts of theatrical and original made-for-television films, as well as other selected third-party programming.
Nickelodeon was first tested on December 1, 1977 as the C-3 channel of QUBE, an early local cable television system in Columbus, Ohio. Initially, the C-3 channel exclusively aired Pinwheel, an educational show developed by Dr. Vivian Horner; the series' success allowed Horner to expand the program into a full channel on national television. The channel, now named Nickelodeon, was launched nationwide as the first cable network aimed at children on April 1, 1979, with Pinwheel as its first program. The network was initially commercial-free and remained without advertising until 1984.
Today, Nickelodeon's programming runs Mondays - Thursdays from 6:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. ET/PT Mondays - Thursdays, Fridays from 6:30 a.m. - 10 p.m. ET/PT and weekends from 6 a.m. - 9 p.m. ET/PT (if including the Nick Jr. block) (the sign-off time varies with holidays and special programming). Since 1985, it has shared its channel space with Nick at Nite, a nighttime block that airs during interim hours and is treated by Nielsen as a separate channel for ratings purposes. As of 2018, Nickelodeon is available to over 87.1 million households in the United
Nickelodeon's first series Pinwheel was tested on December 1, 1977 as part of QUBE, a local cable system in Columbus, Ohio. The puppet-driven show, created by Dr. Vivian Horner, performed well with QUBE subscribers, and convinced the staff to launch a full children's channel, with Pinwheel as its flagship program.
On April 1, 1979, the channel launched to a national audience under the name Nickelodeon. During its broadcast day, it would air shows such as Pinwheel, Video Comics, America Goes-Bananaz, Nickel Flicks, and By the Way.
In 1980, Geraldine Laybourne joined the network as program manager, and would become vice president of Nickelodeon in 1984 before being named its president in 1989.
During the 1980s and 1990s, the channel became known for its green slime, originally featured in the network's first major hit, the Canadian sketch comedy show You Can't Do That On Television. The slime was then adopted by the channel as a primary feature of many of its game shows and special events.
In 1985, the "Silver Ball" logo (which debuted in 1981) was replaced with the orange shape-shifting logo (introduced in 1984) which would continue to be used for nearly 45 years.
On August 11, 1991, Nickelodeon introduced the Nicktoons, original animated shows created by the network. The first three Nicktoons were Doug, The Ren & Stimpy Show, and Rugrats. The shows became highly popular, and Nickelodeon Animation Studio continues to produce new Nicktoons to this day.
The most successful Nicktoon, SpongeBob SquarePants, premiered as a "sneak peek" on May 1, 1999. By 2004, it had become the most profitable program in Nickelodeon history. In 2002, a cable channel called Nicktoons TV was launched. Several original shows have premiered new episodes on the Nicktoons network.
In the early 2010s, Nickelodeon debuted the first two Nicktoons based on preexisting TV franchises, as opposed to new characters: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Winx Club. These two revamped shows were developed at Nickelodeon Animation Studio following Viacom's purchases of both properties. In 2019, Nick Animation debuted its first streaming-exclusive Nicktoon, Pinky Malinky, which was released on Netflix rather than television. Several months later, the studio announced a multi-year deal to produce animated content for Netflix, including new properties and spin-offs of previous Nicktoons.
This is a list of television programs broadcast by Nickelodeon in the United States. The channel was first tested on December 1, 1977, as an experimental local channel in Columbus, Ohio. On April 1, 1979, the channel expanded into a national network named Nickelodeon.
The first program broadcast on Nickelodeon was Pinwheel, a preschool series created by Dr. Vivian Horner, who also conceived the idea for the channel itself. At its launch, Nickelodeon was commercial-free and mainly featured educational shows. By 1984, the channel began accepting traditional advertisements and introduced more entertainment-focused programming. In January 1988, the network launched a weekday morning block for preschoolers called Nick Jr., which carried Pinwheel and other educational series. Around the same time, Nickelodeon started to invest in its own original animated shows, which eventually premiered in 1991 under the "Nicktoons" branding. Since then, the channel has consistently aired a mix of original live-action and animated titles.
Nicktoons is the brand name given to the animated television series that are produced and aired by Nickelodeon.
The first three "Nicktoons" (Doug, Rugrats, and The Ren & Stimpy Show) began production in 1990 before premiering as part of a 90-minute block on Sunday, August 11, 1991. This format was repeated every Sunday, eventually leading to the production of more Nicktoons at Nickelodeon Animation Studio's first facility in California.
1999 marked the premiere of SpongeBob SquarePants, which would later become the longest-running Nicktoon. During the same year, Nickelodeon opened a second animation facility in New York City. A spin-off channel named after Nicktoons was established on May 1, 2002.
In the 2010s, Nickelodeon Animation Studio began to produce Nicktoons based on pre-existing franchises that had been purchased by Viacom: Winx Club (in 2011) and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (in 2012). Both shows had unprecedentedly high budgets for Nicktoons, and a large team of Nickelodeon veterans grouped to work on Winx Club. A series for a third acquired property, Garfield, is in development.
The Nicktoons brand also extends to other media, such as crossover games featuring the Nicktoon characters (including Nicktoons Unite! and the Nickelodeon Super Brawl series). Since 2001, the official slogan for the brand has been "[They're] Not just cartoons, they're Nicktoons".
Nickelodeon also operates language or culture-specific channels for various markets in different parts of the world, and has licensed some of its cartoons and other content, in English and local languages, to TV and cable stations such as KI.KA and Super RTL in Germany, RTÉ Two (English) and TG4 (Irish) in Ireland, YTV and Teletoon (English) and VRAK.TV (French) in Canada, Canal J in France, Alpha Kids in Greece and CNBC-e in Turkey.
As of 2007, the network also broadcasts in Southeast Asia, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, UK, Scandinavia, Ireland, Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Germany, Cyprus, India, Italy, Israel, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Turkey, Hungary, France, Russia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Romania, Africa, Latin America, and Brazil.
On October 11, 2006, Viacom's subsidiary MTV Networks Asia Pacific set up a new unit to manage Nickelodeon South East Asia TV based in Singapore. Nickelodeon was launched in Singapore and expanded its services in Southeast Asia, South Asia and Polynesia. Today, Nickelodeon Philippines and Nickelodeon India work independently. They started their new website Nicksplat.com in 2003.
In India, Nickelodeon is available on the One Alliance bouquet, through the Dish TV and Tata Sky DTH services. In the Philippines, it is available on SkyCable Gold, Silver and Platinum channel 45, Sun Cable channel 34 and Global Destiny Cable channel 21. In Hong Kong, it is available on now TV, while in Malaysia, it is available over Astro via Channel 60. In Singapore, it is available over Starhub Cable TV and in Indonesia, Nickelodeon is available on Astro Nusantara channel 14, and is also broadcast on Global TV, a free-to-air television channel.
A pan-Arabia version of Nickelodeon was relaunched in 2008, in countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Lebanon. From the late 1990s until the mid-2000s, Nickelodeon was offered on the Showtime Arabia and Orbit satellite services until they were removed; today Nickelodeon Arabia is only available on Orbit Showtime (OSN) along with Nick Jr.
Several Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. programs can also be seen overseas on the U.S. military-exclusive AFN Family channel. Bubble Guppies NKJR
SpongeBob SquarePants
SpongeBob
Gary
Sandy
Patrick
Pearl
Squidward
Mr. Krabs
Plankton
Karen
Mrs. Puff
Larry
Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Leonardo/Leo
Michelamgelo/Mikey
Dontaello/Donnie
Raphael/Raph
April O'Neil
Splinter
Leatherhead
Wingnut
Genghis Frog
Ray Filet
Scumbug
Avatar: The Last Airbender & The Legend of Korra
Aang
Momo
Appa
Katara
Sokka
Toph
Zuko
Iroh
Azula
Suki
Korra
Asami
The Loud House & The Casagrandes
Lincoln/Linky
Rita
Lily
Lucy
Lana
Luan
Lori
Myrtle
Shelby
Clyde
Stella
Liam
Zach
Rusty
Ronnie Anne
Adelaide
Sid
Alisa
Rugrats
Tommy
Chuckie
Susie
Phil
Lil
Kimi
Reptar
Hey Arnold!
Arnold
Helga
Gerald
Phoebe
Grandpa Phil
Rocko's Moder Life
Rocko
Spunky
Heffer
Filburt
Rachel Bighead
Really Really Big Man
Invader Zim
Zim
GIR
Gaz
Monster High (2022)
Clawdeen Wolf
Frankie Stein
Craculaura
Lagoona Blue
Deuce Gorgon
Cleo de Nile
Clawd
Zokie of Planet Ruby
Ruby
Zokie
Transformers: EarthSpark
Optimus Prime
Bumblebee
Elita-1
Megatron
My Life As a Teenage Robot
Jenny
Tuck
Brad
Sheldon Lee
Nora
CatDog
CatDog
Winslow
Lola Caricola
Danny Phantom
Danny Phantom
Sam
Tucker
ChalkZone
Rudy
Penny
Snap
El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera
Manny/El Tigre
Frida
The Angry Beavers
Norbert
Daggett
Treeflower
Bing
Barry
T.U.F.F. Puppy
Dudley
Kitty
Rock Paper Scissors
Rock
Paper
Scissors
The Ren & Stimpy Show
Ren
Stimpy
Powdered Toast Man
The Smurfs (2021)
Smurfette
Papa Smurf
Hefty
Brainy
Blossom
Garfield and Friends
Garfield
Odie
Nermal
Jon
#nickelodeon#nickelodeon animation#paramount#paramount global#spongebob squarepants#tales of the teenage mutant ninja turtles#tottmnt#tales of the tmnt#avatar the last airbender#the legend of korra#the loud house#the casagrandes#rugrats#hey arnold#rocko's modern life#invader zim#monster high#zokie of planet ruby#transformers earthspark#my life as a teenage robot#catdog#tuff puppy#danny phantom#chalkzone#the angry beavers#garfield and friends#ren and stimpy#rock paper scissors#the smurfs#el tigre the adventures of manny rivera
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
FIGHTING GAME TIMELINE 2024
Fighting game timeline
(Note: This runs concurrently with the Assassin's Creed timeline)
https://assassinscreed.fandom.com/wiki/Timeline
November 30 1524, Ezio Auditore passes away
1583- Events of Soul Blade, Sophitia and Taki def Cervantes
1586- Events of Soul Calibur 1 Kilik/Xiangua def Seigfried
1590: Soul Calibur II, Raphael destroys Soul Edge’s Core, Siegfried finishes the job
1590-1591: Events of Soul Calibur III/IV: Mitsurugi’s endings are canon
1608- Soul Calibur V. Ezio Auditore escapes Brawlhalla to participate, is apprehended by Valkieries
Here is the official timeline taken from the official Samurai Shodown V website. All the series' chronology takes place during the Edo period and considering the seasons of Northern Hemisphere:
Year/Period
Japanese Era
Game
1786 (January through late summer)
Tenmei Era (6th Year)
Samurai Shodown V
1787
Tenmei Era (7th Year)
Samurai Shodown (2019)
1788 (early spring through early summer)
Tenmei Era (8th Year)
Samurai Shodown I
1788 (summer through early autumn)
Tenmei Era (8th Year)
Samurai Shodown III
1788 (autumn through early winter)
Tenmei Era (8th Year)
Samurai Shodown IV
1789 (spring through summer)
Tenmei Era (9th Year)
Samurai Shodown II
1789 (autumn) through 1790 (summer)
Tenmei Era (9th Year) and Kansei Era (1st Year)
Samurai Shodown 64
1789 (mid-autumn)
Tenmei Era (9th Year)
Samurai Shodown V Special & Samurai Shodown V Perfect (non-canon entries)
1790 (late autumn through winter)
Kansei Era (1st Year)
Samurai Shodown 64: Warriors Rage
1791
Kansei Era (2nd Year)
Samurai Shodown Sen
1799 (new century start)
Kansei Era (10th Year)
Samurai Shodown VI (non-canon entry)
1811
Bunka Era (7th Year)
Samurai Shodown: Warriors Rage
1863- Events of The Last Blade
1864: Events of The Last Blade II
1957-Kazuya Mishima is born
1957-1961- Kazumi asks Akuma to kill Kazuya and Heihachi
1962- Hehachi kills Kazumi, imprison Jinpachi, throws Kazuya off cliff
1983: First King of Iron Fist Tournament happens: Kazuya def Heihachi
December 1984: King of Iron Fist Tournament II happens: Heihachi def Kazuya
August 5, 1985- Jin Kazama is born
1987- Ryu and Ken witness murder of Gouken by Akuma
1987: First Street Fighter Tournament happens, Ryu def Sagat
1987: Doctor Brown Sugar uses his time machine to host the World Heroes series over the course of the year. Shadaloo uses the machine as a basis for the Psycho Drive. Unknowingly, this cracks the space time continum
1988- Street Fighter Alpha tournaments occur, death of Charlie Nash, Destruction of Psycho Drive fractures space time continuum . Marvel universe bleeds into universe, Marvel fracture is repaired, the events of Taisen Net Gimmick occur. Ken Masters becomes champion of Darkstalkers rights, is unsuccessful
1991: Street Fighter II tournaments occur. The following video games are created
Pocket Fighter
Capcom vs SNK pocket fighter
Puzzle Fighter
1991- Ryu is sent to the following universes
Family Guy vs. American Dad
Fortnite
Capcom Fighting Evolution
IDARB
Varth
Battle Cats
Summoners War
Rockman x Dive
1992: Street Fighter EX tournaments occur
Summer 1992: The events of Ninja Gaiden Black/Sigma/Sigma Plus take Place
Winter 1992: The events of Ninja Gaiden Dragon Sword take place
1993: Terry Bogard successfully defeats Geese, knocking him off his tower and presumably killing him
Summer 1993: The events of the Ninja Gaiden Dragon War Manga take place
1993: Ryo Sakazaki is successful in stopping Mr. Big, rescuing Yuri, and Takumi
1993: SIN tournament occurs Marvel and Capcom universes are merged once again due to portals, angering Galactus. An unknown trio defeat galactus
January 1993:
Q3 1993- Virtua Fighter/DOA 1 tournaments begin concurrently. Lau and Kasumi win respectively (Tina is the official winner of DOA won)
1994: Ryu is sent to the following worlds
Asura’s Wrath: Yokozuna vs Street Fighter
Street Fighter Duel
Teppen:
Granblue Fantasy
Street Fighter the mouse generation
3D Dot Game Heroes
Tatsunoko vs Capcom
Winter 1993: The events of Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite take place
1994: Ryu is drafted into Super Smash Brothers, interconnecting Capcom, SNK,Virtua Fighter, Ninja Gaiden/DOA, Namco, and Akira characters with the Nintendo verse
August 1994: First KoF tournament takes place, Team Japan defeats Rugal
1994: Ken Chun-Li, and Terry are plucked from the dimension to Join super Smash Brothers
Q3 1994: Virtua Fighter and DOA tournaments happen concurrently, Ryu Hayabusa/Akira Yuki win respectively
1995:
July 1995- KoF 1995 occurs Team Japan defeats Rugal
Q3 1995: Virtua Fighter 3 and Dead or Alive 3 happen concurrently, Kage and Ayane win respectively
Q4: 1995- Xtreme Beach Volleyball takes place on Zack Island
December 1995- Black Moons incident occurs, death of M.Bison, Shadaloo dissolves
Ryu is sent to the following universes
Shadowverse
Blood Brothers II
Fist of the Northstar
KoF Ultra
MTG
Minecraft
Power Rangers Battle for the Grid
7 Nights
1996:
“World Warrior Tournament: A New Generation” begins
July-August 1996: King of Fighters 1996 begins: Team Japan defeats Chizuru and Goenitz. Chizuru attempts to form Team Sacred Treasures, is unsuccessful
Q3 1996: Virtua Fighter 4 and Dead or Alive 4 tournaments happen concurrently, Kage and Zack win, although Zack’s title was given to him by Helena
Q4 1996: DOATech absorbs J6 Corp bringing an end to the Virtua Fighter tournament. The second Xtreme Beach Volleyball Tournament takes place on the second Zack Isand
1997: “World Warrior Tournament: Second Impact” begins
July 1997 King of Fighters 1997 begins: Team Sacred Treasures seals Orochi, Kyo Kusanagi and Iori Yagami are presumed dead
1998: “World Warrior Tournament: 3rd Strike begins, Gil is defeated, Secret Society is dissolved
King of Fighters 1998 is cancelled
1998: Wolf Hawkfield and Jeffery McWild join All Japan Pro Wrestling for the year as guests, participating in that year’s championship Carnival as singles competitors and Real World Tag League as a team
1998: The events of Ninja Gaiden III Razor’s Edge take place
1999: King of Fighters 1999 tournament begins Team K’ wins tournament
July 2000: King of Fighters 2000 tournament begins Team Hero wins SouthTown is destroyed by Zero Laser
Q3 2000- Dead or Alive 5 tournament takes place: Jahn Lee wins but disappears before being crowned
Q4 2000: The third Xtreme Beach Volleyball Tournament takes place
2001: King of Fighters 2001 begins, Team Hero wins
Capcom vs SNK 2: Mark of the Millennium 2001 begins: Ryu wins, defeating Terry
Q3 2001: Dead of Alive 6 Tournament takes place, Jahn Lee wins
Q4 2001: The fourth Xtreme Beach Volleyball Tournament begins
2002: King of Fighters 2002 Ultimate Match begins Team Japan wins, defeating team K’
2003: King of Fighters 2003 tournament: Team Ash wins
2003: SvC Chaos occurs: Ryu wins
2004: King of Iron Fist Tournament 3 begins: Jin Kazama wins
2005: King of Fighters 11 takes place: Team Ash wins
January 2006: King of Iron Fist Tournament 4 completes: Jin wins
April 2006: King of Iron Fist Tournament 5 begins: Jin wins
December 2006:Pandora releases Pandora’s Box onto the world, reviving M.Bison and setting into motion the events of Street Fighter x Tekken. Asuka and Lili find the box first, falling into the deepest recesses of th North Pole as result
December 2006 World War 3 breaks out, interrupting King of Fighters 12. January 2007: Jin Kazama is deposed by Lars Alexanderson and Eliza Boschonovich ending the world war
June 2007: Jin Kazama is located the events of Tekken 7 story mode play out. Jin is pulled into Super Smash Brothers dimension from here
December 2007: King of Fighters 13 begins Team Ash wins Ash defeats Saiki
December 2007: Events of Tekken 8 take place
2009: Doctor Light spearheads rebuilding efforts, causing Barack Obama to put him on the currency. The events of Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite take place, the infinity gems are used to finally right the timeline
December 2008: The events of KOF 14 take place, Samurai Showdown characters are transported to this time via Doctor Brown Sugar
December 2009: The events of KOF 15 take place. Samurai Showdown characters are transported to this time via Doctor Brown Sugar
2024: the events of Street Fighter 6 take place
20XX: The events of Mega Man take place. At some point, Ryu teaches Doctor Light Hadoken and Shoryuken techniques
2048: The events of Strider take place
2099: The events of Cyberbots Full Metal Madness take place
2XXX: The events of the Megaman X series takes place
2348: The events of Star Gladiator takes place
56XX: The events of the Megaman Legends series take place
XXXX: The events of Megaman X Zero take place
#capcom#street fighter#tekken#virtua fighter#dead or alive#assassin's creed#ezio auditore#snk#king of fighters#koei tecmo#ninja gaiden#the king of fighters#fanfiction#super smash bros#timeline
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Aca Top 10: 80s Cartoon Themes — VoicePlay music video
youtube
The VoicePlay boys might technically be grown-ups, but they'll always be big kids at heart. So for their first "Aca Top 10" countdown of the year, they decided to revisit the joy of Saturday mornings spent in front of the TV with bowls of sugary cereal. Everybody sing along!
Details:
title: Aca Top 10 — 80s Cartoon Themes
original songs / performers: "La La Song" by the cast of The Smurfs (1981); [0:18] Inspector Gadget (1983) theme song; [0:35] Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987) theme by Chuck Lorre; [0:57] Scooby-Doo theme by Larry Marks; [1:16] G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1983) theme; [1:36] Adventures of the Gummi Bears (1985) theme by Joseph Williams; [2:03] Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (1989) theme by Jeff Pescetto; [2:24] My Little Pony (1986) theme; [2:34] "JEM – Truly, Truly, Truly Outrageous" by the singing cast of Jem and the Holograms (1985); [2:55] The Transformers (1984) theme; [3:14] "DuckTales" by Jeff Pescetto for DuckTales (1987)
written by: "La La Song" by Hoyt Curtin; Inspector Gadget theme by Shuki Levy & Haim Saban; Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles theme by Dennis C. Brown & Chuck Lorre; Scooby-Doo (1969) theme by David Mook & Ben Raleigh; The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries (1984) theme by Hoyt Curtin; G.I. Joe theme by Ford Kinder & Spencer Michlin; Adventures of the Gummi Bears theme by Michael & Patty Silversher; Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers theme by Mark Mueller; My Little Pony theme by Ford Klinder, Anne Bryant, & Barry Harman; "JEM – Truly, Truly, Truly Outrageous" by Barry Harman; The Transformers theme by Ford Kinder & Anne Bryant; "DuckTales" by Mark Mueller
arranged by: VoicePlay
release date: 30 March 2018
My favorite bits:
kicking things off with an extra dramatic fanfare
Layne's incredible ratchet sound and miming for the safe's lock dial in the Inspector Gadget theme
Earl giving an excellent Dr. Claw impression
the couch trio doing enthusiastic karate chops at the air 🥷 🐢
J.None taking over the bass line while Geoff sings lead
Layne making the pew-pew noises of the G.I. Joe lasers
Eli, Earl, and J delighting in how springy the couch cushions are at the start of the Gummi Bears theme
Layne and J crooning ♫ "my little brony" ♫ at Geoff while he scowls until he can't resist smiling anymore 🐎
Earl half-heartedly protesting at Eli and J singing the Misfits' part of the Jem! theme whlie he's wearing their signature colors / print
all the electronic-sounding elements they added to the Transformers theme
♫ "here in… Duckburg" ♫ ::quack:: 🦆
Gotta get in a bell chord somewhere, and that's a very good spot.
finishing on a joyful ♫ "Woo-ooo!" ♫
Eli quietly playing with a Transformer and Earl's enthusiastic "Cowabunga, dude!" in the outro
Trivia:
○ This was the first full-length video released on VoicePlay's YouTube channel in 2018. They started the year with a short video of "Happy Birthday", in between two collaborations they had recorded the previous fall that are on other channels — "Waving Through a Window" with Kurth Hugo Schneider, and "Look What You Made Me Do" with pocket.watch.
○ According to their replies to some YouTube comments, there was quite a debate about which songs to include or not, and "Thunder Cats was about a 2 hour argument. Shoes were thrown." 😆
○ Despite being very recognizable as The Smurfs theme, the version of the "La La Song" with lyrics was only used for the show's opening credits during season 2 in the U.S. However, an instrumental version was used for the closing credits from then on.
○ At least one of the guys came by his martial arts moves honestly. Eli studied karate from age six until he was sixteen.
○ For the Scooby-Doo theme, VoicePlay combined the original 1969 song from Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? (which was still airing in reruns) with some jazzier elements from the 1984 New Scooby Doo Mysteries opening.
○ The silliness in the YouTube description for this one is another misheard lyric — "JIM is truly outrageous / Truly Truly Truly outrageous / Woh oh oh JIM - JIM!!!" // "That's such a weird song. Who the heck is Jim anyway..?"
○ The guys' shirts reflect some of their childhood favorites:
Eli — Scrooge McDuck from DuckTales half-buried in the gold pile in his money vault with the inscription "living the dream"
Earl — Ultimate Warrior (WWF / WWE) facepaint, sort of referencing Hulk Hogan's Rock 'n' Wrestling, though the show was cancelled before that character could appear; bonus charteuse zebra-print leggings for The Misfits from Jem! and the Holograms
J.None — face masks of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (which aired into the mid-90s for the younger guy)
Geoff — Autobot mask symbol from The Transformers
Layne — Rainbow Dash from My Little Pony (a slight cheat with a character from the 2010s series, but probably inspired by one or more of his daughters). I cannot for the life of me figure out where that specific design came from, but I found a couple close-ish approximations.
○ Layne posted some videos of both the final rehearsal and cleanup process on his Instagram.
instagram
instagram
Those light diffusers can be a handful.
#VoicePlay#music video#a cappella#live recording#music medley#tv theme songs#music#video#series: Aca Top 10
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
On May 9, 1986, American Ninja debuted in West Germany.
#american ninja#american ninja 1985#sam firstenberg#steve james#cannon films#action movies#1980s#tcm underground#cult cinema#fan art#pen drawing#trash art#exploitation film#cult classic#movie art#art#drawing#movie history#pop art#modern art#pop surrealism#cult movies#portrait#cult film#west germany
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ninja JaJaMaru-kun (NES)
Developed/Published by: Jaleco Released: 15/11/1985 Completed: 30/03/2023 Completion: Beat all 20 levels before it loops. Version Played: Switch Online Trophies / Achievements: n/a
Ninja JaJaMaru-kun is a series with absolutely no name recognition in the west, even if ININ have put out one of their stupid retro collections of the series where you don’t get all the games unless you buy a specific edition, instead of just, you know, putting out the games in one simple package (if you search for “Ninja JaJaMaru” on the eshop, you get four different options, and you have to buy two of them to get all the games. But makes sure it’s the right two!)
Of course, you could forget all of that and just download the first game via the Japanese Switch Online service, like what I did, because… like me, you don’t have any nostalgia for this series at all. It’s not like it’s Turrican or something (that’s got three different confusing collections thanks to ININ.)
I suppose what makes Ninja JaJaMaru-kun interesting though is that it was a huge success in Japan selling over one million copies–and this, remember, is coming just a couple of months after Super Mario Bros. was released. This would probably make it surprising that it never came out on NES until you realise that City Connection, Jaleco’s previous title, wouldn’t make it out in the US until May 1988, nearly three years after its original release, by which time Contra, Mega Man and Castlevania have all come out, rendering the simple arcade thrills of a wee car driving (or a wee ninja jumping) around a bit old hat. And, to be honest, there’s enough of a similarity between City Connection and Ninja JaJaMaru-kun as side-scrolling platformers that if you had to release one, you’re probably going to release the one that everyone understands (cars) rather than the one with a more specific cultural reference point (ninjas.) Even 80s ninja action films were having their last gasp by 1988 (American Ninja 2: The Confrontation probably the last notable release, and that came out in 1987 and didn’t do that well.) Although I suppose they could have tried to claim JaJaMaru was a reptile of some sort and ride the rising Turtle craze...
That all said, I was pleasantly surprised to discover that I quite liked Ninja JaJaMaru-kun, to the point where I would happily say I liked it quite a bit more than the NES port of City Connection. It’s an extremely basic little platformer, something that clearly speaks to the pre-Super Mario Bros. era of Mappy and Ice Climber. Every level features eight enemies, two on each of the four levels of the level (er, look at the picture if this doesn’t make sense) with for the majority of the levels the last top right enemy a “boss” that’s a bit harder to kill (until in later levels they turn into a normal enemy and aren’t quite as bad, somehow.) You can jump, and shoot shurikens that don’t travel especially far, and to get between the different levels you can destroy platforms above you, which sometimes expose power-ups (or bombs, if you’re unlucky). Ninja JaJaMaru-kun only dies to being shot by enemies, not touching them, and for about half the game, you can just shoot the enemies, but from then on you have to stun them by jumping on their heads (or by manufacturing a way to make them drop a level and fall over) so you can shoot them.
Oh, and the power-ups are things like a little cart (?) that allows you to just run into all the enemies at full speed. And if you collect three… you ride a giant frog (???) that freezes all the enemies and allows you to jump about eating them–basically making beating a level trivial.
Additionally, at the top of the screen you can see the “Catfish Pirate” and Princess Sakura who you are, ostensibly, trying to rescue–which you can only do in a special bonus level where you get to shoot your shurikens upwards at the Catfish Pirate, accessible if you collect three sakura petals that Princess Sakura infrequently drops during normal levels. Which you can’t hang around waiting for, because if you take too long in a level the Catfish Pirate starts going mental chucking bombs at you.
In description, it doesn’t really sound like all that, and it’s honestly a bit… kusoge-adjacent, considering it’s got jerky scrolling, poor animation, dodgy collision detection and really not that much going on. But it’s sort of weirdly pleasant to play once you get into it, with the “jump on an enemy to shoot them” mechanic quickly becoming second nature making clearing off levels efficiently feel quite rewarding. It’s not all gravy; sometimes the boss enemies are going to juke you in way that feels genuinely unfair, and you can sometimes get caught in little collision-loops that just end up in your death.
But I can kind of see why this was a phenomenon–at least at a time when Super Mario Bros. hasn’t yet set the tone for everything yet to come.
Will I ever play it again? I can’t imagine I will, and it hasn’t done enough to make me put up with ININ’s bullshit to get the sequels.
Final Thought: “But wait,” you might be asking “what’s the deal with the giant frog? I mean you kind of just glossed over that.”
Well, turns out it’s a reference to The Tale of the Gallant Jiraiya, a series of Japanese books that was published in the early 1800s, in which a giant frog that lives on a mountain teaches the main character magic, including the ability to summon and ride giant frogs. This apparently also inspired some characters in Naruto, and is probably also why that Pokemon Greninja is a ninja frog. The more you know!
Support Every Game I’ve Finished on ko-fi! You can pick up a digital copy of exp. 2600, a zine featuring all-exclusive writing at my shop, or join as a supporter at just $1 a month and get articles like this a week early.
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
Movie Diary 2023
Now that the new year is in full swing I finally have the time to go over my personal stats :D I've watched 145 movies this year (excluding rewatches) which is just 4 movies shy of my high of 149 movies from 2017 but I didn't even try that hard lol
Shoutout to the roosmav discord with which I've watched many Tom Cruise and Miles Teller movies and which definitely was part of the high number this year - love you guys!
Full list under the cut, my favorites are bold:
001 Legend
002 Emily the Criminal
003 The Banshees of Inisherin
004 The Swimmers
005 Cyrano
006 Thank You for Your Service
007 The Last Samurai
008 Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid
009 Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
010 Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio
011 National Theatre Live: No Man's Land
012 Strange World
013 21 & Over
014 All Quiet on the Western Front
015 National Theatre Live: Prima Facie
016 Teen Wolf: The Movie
017 Puss in Boots
018 Elivs
019 Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
020 Rock of Ages
021 Causeway
022 The Quiet Girl
023 National Theatre Live: All About Eve
024 Triangle of Sadness
025 Minority Report
026 Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania
027 American Made
028 The Fabelmans
029 Fire of Love
030 The Fabelmans
031 EO
032 Get a Job
033 Cocktail
034 Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
035 Batman Begins
036 Knock at the Cabin
037 Taps
038 Spiderhead
039 A Few Good Men
040 The Whale
041 Apocalypse Now (The Final Cut)
042 Women Talking
043 Miss Americana
044 Devotion
045 Operation Fortune: Ruse due Guerre
046 Tetris
047 Field of Dreams
048 Knight and Day
049 Missing
050 Shazam! Fury of the Gods
051 Days of Thunder
052 65
053 After Yang
054 Suzume
055 Serial (Bad) Weddings 3
056 Vanilla Sky
057 Cocaine Bear
058 Ghosted
059 Eyes Wide Shut
060 Amsterdam
061 Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
062 Renfield
063 New Gods: Yang Jian
064 I Am What I Am
065 Man on Wire
066 Independence Day
067 The Super Mario Bros. Movie
068 The Firm
069 Polite Society
070 Air
071 The Blue Caftan
072 Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
073 Mary is Happy, Mary is Happy
074 Joyland
075 Anything's Possible
076 Murder on the Orient Express
077 Kinky Boots
078 Mission: Impossible II
079 Schwimmen
080 Firebird
081 Mission: Impossible III
082 4th Man Out
083 Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol
084 Bulldog
085 Cruel Intentions
086 John Wick: Chapter 4
087 Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One
088 Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
089 Extraction 2
090 Nimona
091 Deep Sea
092 Barbie
093 Die Concorde - Absturz einer Legende
094 The Flash
095 Jumbo (2020)
096 Only the Brave
097 Joy Ride
098 Kill Boksoon
099 Oppenheimer
100 The 355
101 Legend (1985)
102 The Monkey King (2023)
103 Elemental
104 Wham!
105 Heart of Stone
106 Saint Omer
107 Eldorado: Everything the Nazis Hate
108 Past Lives
109 Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken
110 A Million Miles Away
111 Theater Camp
112 Bottoms
113 They Cloned Tyrone
114 Asteroid City
115 Saw
116 Race to the Summit
117 The Last Voyage of the Demeter
118 No One Will Save You
119 Brightburn
120 The Skin I Live In
121 M3GAN
122 Event Horizon
123 Bones and All
124 When Evil Lurks
125 Gran Turismo
126 Knuckle Girl
127 Tom Cruise: The Last Movie Star
128 The Last Black Man in San Francisco
129 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes
130 Blue Beetle
131 The Creator
132 Napoleon
133 Mark Rothko - La peinture vous regarde
134 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
135 Linoleum
136 Wish
137 Quiz Lady
138 Pain Hustlers
139 Leo
140 Big
141 No Dogs or Italians Allowed
142 Violent NIght
143 Trading Places
144 Rebel Moon - Part One: A Child of Fire
145 Journey to the West (2021)
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
American Ninja and American Ninja 2: The Confrontation will be released on Blu-ray on October 31 via Kino Lorber. Produced by Cannon Films, the martial arts films star Michael Dudikoff.
1985's American Ninja is directed by Sam Firstenberg (Ninja III: The Domination) and written by Paul De Mielche. Guich Knock, Judie Aronson, Steve James, John Fujioka, and Tadashi Yamashita co-star.
1987's American Ninja 2: The Confrontation is directed by Sam Firstenberg and written by Gary Conway (Over the Top) and James Booth. Steve James, Jeff Weston, Gary Conway, Michelle Botes, and Larry Poindexter co-star.
Special features for both titles are listed below.
American Ninja special features:
Audio commentary by director Sam Firstenberg and stunt coordinator Steven Lambert
Audio commentary by director Sam Firstenberg, moderated by filmmaker Elijah Drenner
A Rumble in the Jungle: The Making of American Ninja
Theatrical trailer
Stationed in the Philippines, 18-year-old U.S. Army private Joe Armstrong (Michael Dudikoff) is escorting a supply convoy when it is ambushed by rebels—one of whom he recognizes as a Black Ninja warrior. Instinctively, Joe defends himself using the esoteric martial art of Ninjitsu—an ability that puts him under suspicion by his commander and fellow soldiers. Alone in his fight against corruption, the boy finally discovers the secret of his mysterious past—a secret that pits him against the evil Black Star Ninja (Tadashi Yamashita) in the ultimate martial arts battle.
Pre-order American Ninja.
American Ninja 2 special features:
Audio commentary by director Sam Firstenberg and stunt coordinator BJ Davies
Audio commentary by director Sam Firstenberg, moderated by filmmaker Elijah Drenner
An American Ninja in Cape Town: The Making of American Ninja 2
Theatrical trailer
When U.S. Army Rangers Joe Armstrong (Michael Dudikoff) and Curtis Jackson (Steve James) go on a Caribbean mission for missing Marines, they find themselves matching their deadly Ninjitsu skills against the elite Ninja forces of The Lion (Gary Conway)—a psychotic drug lord who genetically alters his fighters into superhuman martial arts killers! Learning that four kidnapped Marines are about to undergo The Lion’s inhuman transformation, the Rangers infiltrate his island fortress—and launch into an explosive battle against a horde of mutant Ninja warrior-clones!
Pre-order American Ninja 2: The Confrontation.
#american ninja#american ninja 2#michael dudikoff#steve james#cannon films#kino lorber#dvd#gift#80s movies#1980s movies#martial arts#martial arts movies#sam firstenberg#judie aronson#80s action movies
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
My @letterboxd review of American Ninja (1985)
0 notes