muted

Pray for Death

Rating5.7 /10
19851 h 38 m
United States
2488 people rated

After a peace-loving Japanese immigrant and his family become victims of a crime syndicate, a master ninja emerges.

Action
Crime
Drama

User Reviews

Nissi

29/05/2023 14:40
source: Pray for Death

halaj

23/05/2023 06:55
Words cannot express how important ninjas were in 1985. Every single day, American kids drew pictures of them during class, beat on one another with their weapons and watched their movies, which could nearly have an entire shelf of your local video store all to themselves. Pray for Death is Sho Kosugi's vehicle and he makes the most of it. You may remember him as the villainous Hasegawa who fought Franco Nero in Enter the Ninja, but here he's graduated to become the hero. He plays salaryman Akira Saito, who has decides to follow his wife's dream and immigrate from Japan to the United States along with their two sons Takeshi and Tomoya (Sho's sons Kane and Shane). What his family does not know is that Akira is a ninja and has kept the temple's secrets, even killing his own brother Shoji as he tried to steal from their adopted father Koga (Robert Ito, Sam Fujiyama on Quincy, M. D.). His master tells him to leave Japan behind and erase the guilt he's felt over what happened. Purchasing an old store from a kindly man named Sam Green (Parley Baer, the mayor of Mayberry!) that will become Aiko's Japanese Restaurant. But before they can see any success, two crooked cops hide a necklace inside the floorboards, leading to Akira's children being attacked, Green being murdered and eventually, our hero's wife being injured and then killed inside the hospital while she recovers. This all means that Akira must return to the ways of the ninja and literally force a man to pray for death before impaling his hands and sawing him in half. Yes, this form of ninjitsu is not quiet in any way. Director Gordon Hessler has the kind of IMDB list that makes me excited about movies. It has it all, from Scream, Pretty Peggy and The Oblong Box to The Golden Voyage of Sinbad and Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park. He makes the kind of movies people like me want to watch. Predictably, critics hated this movie. Please show me the ninja movie that they have enjoyed.

Mathy faley

23/05/2023 06:55
Granted that having been a preteen in the 1980s, then the wave of ninja movies was definitely something that I was watching on VHS. And then I decided to watch the 1985 "Pray For Death" in 2019. Somewhat of a mistake. This was better left in the past with the fond memories. Watching "Pray For Death" today was somewhat of a slap to the face with an ice cold dead fish. The movie was downright ludicrous. The storyline was as simple as it could get; a Japanese family moves to the USA to start a fresh new life, setting up a business in a fairly rundown and bad neighborhood. Yeah, what could or would possibly go wrong there? Then when the father's son is hospitalized and his wife murdered, everything falls apart and he brings out his ancient ninja heritage to wreck vengeance on the perpetrators. Sure, this was entertaining back in the mid 1980s, but today, no, not so much. The storyline was so stupid that it was almost bordering on being insulting to the intelligence of the audience. And as for ninja action, well then there wasn't really all that much of it. It was in the beginning and end of the movie, so you could essentially skip the middle part of the movie and still be up to speed with the storyline. And as for the ninja, well Shô Kosugi wearing an abysmal fake metal helmet on his ninja outfit and a nylon sheet covering his mouth was just a bit too tacky - even for a mid 1980s ninja movie. Sure Shô Kosugi might have been a great martial artist back in the day and won a heap of competitions, but that doesn't really mean that he has talent on the screen. Let's just say that I wasn't particularly impressed with what I saw in "Pray For Death". Was this an entertaining ninja movie? No, not really. I will actually say that the likes of Michael Dudikoff's "American Ninja" movies were better than this. Is this a movie that I will return to watch again? No, definitely not. Is it worth the time, effort or money? No.

Vines

23/05/2023 06:55
The plot is cheesy and predictable, sort of 'rape and revenge' although it's the husband who's doing the revenge since the wife died. The actors are like zombies and the choreography isn't much to cheer for either. Save your time and your money, don't see this rubbish.

safaeofficial1

23/05/2023 06:55
this is the 4th best ninja movie of all time. 4th behind >revenge of the ninja,ninja III,and american ninja. there >are some good fighting scenes in pray for death. all in >all not the best ninja movie ever,but the 4th best. i give pray for death **1/2 out of ****

Mafu Guambe

23/05/2023 06:55
Sho Kosugi never made it big like Jackie Chan, and it's easy to see why: he has the same likable screen presence, the same problems with the English language, even the same haircut...but his martial-arts choreography is two or three notches below, two or three clicks slower than, Jackie's standards. To put it simply, the fight scenes in "Pray For Death" are boring (though the climax does incorporate a wide variety of weapons). The story is boring, too - and spiced up with gratuitous sadism (what fun to see bed-ridden women and old men beaten to a bloody pulp and then murdered, eh?). I don't know if there even IS a "best ninja movie of all time", but this one definitely is not it. (*1/2)

thatkidfromschool

23/05/2023 06:55
I just watched Pray for Death on Showtime at 2:30 in the morning. This is a totally sweet movie about ninjas, in which Sho Kosugi is this bad ass super ninja who kills a whole bunch of people before moving to America, where he is framed for drug trafficking, and his wife is raped and murdered, and that is the point where he totally flips out and kills dozens and dozens of people. I did find it odd that while his family is from Japan, Sho's wife doesn't look terribly oriental. But otherwise this is a totally sweet eighties action movie with lots of killing and flipping out.

drmarymkandawire

23/05/2023 06:55
This movie came out some time in the 80's so for obvious reasons the fight scenes look crappy. Well we live in the "Matrix" age now where every movie since then has to resemble it or copy it somehow. This movie could have used some "Matrix"-ing. Okay, I know this movie came out in 1985, waaay before "The Matrix", but seeing this movie again just makes me want to break out in laughter. And I did. I laughed my ass off because not only was the fighting bad, but the acting and the story were also unbearable. The kids in the movie (who are his children in real life) are terrible. And then look at the awful Ninja costume Sho Kosugi wears at the end and if you don't agree that this movie sucks, you've got problems.

D.K.E.0.19

23/05/2023 06:55
Though it has a simple, time-tested plot and a surprisingly effective cast, 'Pray for Death' comes up a bit short in the execution department. The action scenes are effective in that 80s ninja movie style, but they lack the intensity and brutality of Kosugi's 'Revenge of the Ninja'. They and the film also lack the latter's emotional power as well. The cast is certainly up to the task. Kosugi has an amazing ability to go from friendly, mild-mannered businessman to vengeful human weapon with a snap of the fingers. James Booth (who also wrote the screenplay) is quite good as the sadistic lead henchman Limehouse, and veteran character actors Parley Baer and Norman Burton help round out a cast that's much better than we've come to expect from films of this genre. With a few tweaks this could've been on the level with Kosugi classics such as 'Revenge of the Ninja' and 'Ninja III: The Domination'. As it is, it's a second rate shrug of a chop-socky revenge flick.

💪👀

23/05/2023 06:55
A man wants to leave his country behind and start a new life in America. Unfortunately, he runs into gangsters that thought he stole a necklace from them. His family is in danger, and he reverts to his true calling - a ninja - to get justice. Shô Kosugi gives us a great martial arts/revenge flick. His acting isn't the greatest, but his fists speak loudly. He warned them, and now, they will pray for death. Gangsters, crooked cops, and the most dangerous man in California are no match. Even the kid (Kane Kosugi) is dangerous with nun-chucks and darts. They had to really stretch credulity at the end as he fought James Booth. He sliced thought a dozen men, but they stretched this battle out.
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