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  1. Mirai Ninja
    1988 · Action · 1h 11m

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  1. Mirai Ninja: Keigumo Kinin Gaiden (未来忍者:慶雲機忍外伝, lit."Future Ninja: Stealth Joy Cloud Device Side Story"), known as Cyber Ninja in the United States, Warlord in Canada and Robo Ninja in the UK, is a 1988 Japanese science fiction action film directed by Keita Amemiya, which was co-produced and released by Namco that premiered in October 1988 at the Tokyo International ...

    • Keita Amemiya, Satoshi Kitahara
    • Japanese
    • Keita Amemiya
    • Gaga Communications, Graphical Corporation Crowd Inc, Namco
  2. Apr 16, 2024 · Directed by Keita Amemiya, renowned for his visual artistry, Mirai Ninja was based on the Namco arcade game of the same name. Despite its direct-to-video release and modest budget, the film managed to capture the essence of the game and present a story that was both engaging and visually compelling.

  3. The acting performances may be a bit on the absurd side, but they were genuine. The sword-fighting in Mirai Ninja was much better than one might expect and well-choreographed. You also get quality laser light shows and explosions added to the mix during a fight to boost the excitement.

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  5. Apr 3, 2023 · But mostly, Mirai Ninja often feels like a low-fi version of Star Wars that’s even more honest with its influences, peppering The Hidden Fortress with laser blasts, explosions and magic.

  6. Sep 15, 2021 · Mirai Ninja: Keigumo Kinin Gaiden (Future Ninja: Stealth Joy Cloud Device Side Story), known as Cyber Ninja in the United States, Warlord in Canada and Robo Ninja in the UK, is a 1988 Japanese science fiction action film directed by Keita Amemiya, which was co-produced and released by Namco that premiered on October of 1988 at the Tokyo ...

    • 72 min
    • 5.8K
    • Lucero9
  7. Jun 10, 2021 · These orange ninjas only appear on the fifth stage, and attack by jumping out of the Chinese-style lion statues in the background as Mirai Ninja passes them, to land behind him and spit lasers at him; he must turn around and kill them before they can do so, and they are worth 800 points.

  8. Amazingly, this movie was released in the U.S. by Fox Lorber Home Video. Cyber Ninja is seemingly incomprehensible to us round-eyes, and we're not even sure if the video game it's based off of, Mirai Ninja, was even released here. Presumably this would have come out on Nintendo...any guesses?

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