Samurai Cop
Samurai Cop | |
---|---|
Poster art by Ralf Kraus | |
Directed by | Amir Shervan |
Produced by |
Orlando Corradi Amir Shervan |
Written by | Amir Shervan |
Starring |
|
Music by | Alan DerMarderosian |
Cinematography | Peter Palian |
Distributed by | Cinema Epoch |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Samurai Cop is a 1991 direct-to-video action-comedy film, produced by Orlando Corradi, written and directed by Amir Shervan and starring Robert Z'Dar, Matt Hannon, and Mark Frazer.
The film was never released theatrically and has since attained a cult appeal.
Plot
When a renegade Japanese gang known as the Katana take control of the cocaine trade in Los Angeles the LAPD transfer in a Samurai Cop from the SDPD to help tackle the problem. Joe Marshall has been trained by the masters in Japan and speaks fluent Japanese, but dresses like a commoner.
An attempted bust meets with failure after a bizarre car chase leads to multiple deaths and the only witness burned and unable to testify. Katana boss Fuj Fujiyama orders the injured Katana member to be executed and his head displayed on a piano to remind all functioning Katana members of their code of silence. Joe and his partner Frank confront the Katana at the Carlos'n Charlie's restaurant on Sunset Boulevard and attempt to reprimand them into obeying the law. When that fails Fujiyama's right-hand man Yamashita wages war in the parking lot, executing his own men who fail to subdue Joe and Frank, thus maintaining the code of silence.
Joe then stalks Fujiyama's girlfriend Jennifer and seduces her while several of his police comrades are tortured and killed by the Katana gang who are looking for him. Unable to contain his anger any longer commanding officer Captain Rohmer sanctions an assassination of every single Katana gang member. Joe and Frank head to Fujiyama's compound and gun down every living person and a final sword battle between Joe and Yamashita ends the reign of terror.
To celebrate Joe once more has sexual intercourse with Jennifer.
Cast
- Robert Z'Dar as Yamashita
- Matt Hannon as Joe Marshall
- Mark Frazer as Frank Washington
- Cranston Komuro as Fuj Fujiyama
- Gerald Okamura as Okamura
- Dale Cummings as Captain Rohmer
- Melissa Moore as Peggy
Production
Filming took place over several months from June 1990. When actor Hannon had considered shooting to be finished, he had his hair cut short, only to be told that further shooting was to be done. Director Shervan obtained a wig for the actor, which can be seen in several close up shots throughout the movie.[1]
Amir Shervan could not afford lighting to shoot at night so the entire film is set during the day. Actors also wear their own clothes and drive their own cars. Much of the film was also shot "wild" (with no sound) and done with single takes. Shervan had to dub on voices months after production but could not get many of the bit part actors to return. He chose to use his own voice and badly warped it in post production to sound different. His lack of ability to do this correctly means that some of the ADR sounds heavily robotic.
Release and sequel
The movie was never given a theatrical release, though Polish distributor Demel International Corporation released it on VHS.[2][3] It was released on DVD by Media Blasters[4][5] in 2004 and on DVD and Blu-Ray by Cinema Epoch. Gregory Hatanaka, founder of Cinema Epoch, is also responsible for producing and directing a sequel, Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance.[1]
References
- 1 2 Azevedo, Jeremy (10 September 2014). "We Met the Star of 'Samurai Cop', One of the Best (and Worst) Action Movies of All Time". Vice. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
- ↑ RedLetterMedia (Producer) (2014-09-05). A Conversation with Samurai Cop star Matt Hannon (part 2 of 2). Event occurs at 144 seconds. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
I think maybe one guy bought the option in Europe.
- ↑ "Samurai Cop (1989) on Demel (United Kingdom VHS videotape)". Video Collector. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
- ↑ "Samurai Cop". Barnes & Noble. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
- ↑ "Samurai Cop". Media Blasters. 2005-04-20. Retrieved 2015-12-13.