ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SATURDAY, May 7, 1994                   TAG: 9405090124
SECTION: EXTRA                    PAGE: B-12   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: By KEVIN THOMAS LOS ANGELES TIMES
DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD                                LENGTH: Medium


`NINJAS' IS KEEN ON VALUES 3 NINJAS KICK BACK

``3 Ninjas Kick Back'' is just as lively and engaging as the 1992 original. Writer Mark Saltzman and director Charles T. Kanganis, neither of whom were involved in the earlier film, do a fine job of keeping things happening and moving in an easy yet highly kinetic fashion. Although aimed at children, this smart-looking TriStar release is actually more inventive and better-paced than many a comedy for adults.

The sly and ingratiating Victor Wong is back as the Japanese American martial arts whiz who coaches his three grandsons, Rocky (Sean Fox), Colt (Max Elliott Slade, the only actor to reprise his role as one of the brothers) and Tum Tum (Evan Bonifant) in the art and philosophy of self-defense. When we catch up with them, however, they find their passion for baseball vying with their love for martial arts to the extent that they would rather remain home for the upcoming big game when their grandfather goes off to Japan to present a ceremonial dagger he himself had won 50 years earlier to the winner of a ninja tournament.

The dagger is no ordinary weapon, and the man (Sab Shimono), now a shady business tycoon, defeated by Wong half a century ago, covets it mightily because legend has it that the dagger can open the door to a cave of gold hidden beneath an ancient castle.

Like its predecessor, this film shows a genuine concern for values as well as action with its emphasis on discipline, integrity and fair play, and it even dares to suggest that it's possible for a girl (Caroline Junko King) to be better at martial arts than a boy. And when the boys' busy father (Alan McRae), an FBI agent, wonders why his sons respond to their grandfather more than they do to him, his wife (Margarita Franco) gently points out that her father listens to what they have to say.

A TriStar picture playing at Salem Valley 8 and Valley View Mall 6. Rated PG. 99 minutes.



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