To me  Cyborgs are magic. Ninjas are magic. Cannon-productions are pure magic. So the  only thing to do was to talk to one of the most productive directors in  Hollywood, Sam Firstenberg, the creator of such classics as Revenge of the Ninja  (the best Ninja-movie ever?), Cyborg Cop 1 and 2, American Ninja, Ninja III and  many more.
Sam  started his movie career in 1973 when he met the legendary producer Menahem  Golan. He started with serving coff�, cleaning and driving. Just being a runner.  But the magic was there. Sam was on a movie set! After many hard, but funny,  years as a assistant director and also director for his own short movies he  finally was offered the directors chair for Revenge of the Ninja. So let�s talk  with Sam about his long career in movies, and of course we begin with  Ninjas!
Fred  Anderson: In 1983 you  directed in one of the biggest cultmovies ever, Revenge of the Ninja starring  the notorious Sho Kosugi How did you get involved in a  Ninja-movie?

Sam  Firstenberg: The company  that bought my student film "One More Chance", Cannon Films, had just finished a  movie called Enter the Ninja. They were looking for a director for the sequel  and asked if I would be willing to take on the project, to make an action movie.  The truth is that I had never before heard the word "ninja" in my life, but  being young and eager I did not want to pass on such an opportunity so I faked  my way in by letting them think that I knew what it was all about. After  watching the original movie, and two books later, I was knowledgeable enough to  get started, and then I was introduced to Sho Kosugi, the star of the movie, and  he took me under his wing, so to speak, and gave me an in-depth introduction  into the subject. I then realized that all we had to do was make a good action  movie with a ninja twist.

FA: I�m not sure, but Revenge of the Ninja  should be the first of your works for Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus. Tell us  about these legendary producers. Where they easy to work  with?

SF: I have known Menahem and Yoram for many  years, in fact many years before I directed Revenge of the Ninja - I worked as  an assistant director on many of their films, even one that Menahem Golan  directed (Diamonds with Robert Shaw). The way they worked was that Yoram Globus  was in charge of finances, and had little input on the creative side; Menahem  Golan was the creative producer, involved in all the stages of making the  movies. His main interest was in the script and in the editing. During the  shooting I was basically left alone. I would say that in this sense, it was very  easy to work with them, as long as we did not go over budget or exceed the  schedule - which I never did. They trusted me and we had a very good  relationship.
FA: I�m not familiar with Breakin� 2, but  was it a success? Wasn�t this at the end of the breakdancing-era?

SF:  First, I think the movie was at the height of the breakdance era. The first  movie to come out was Breakin' and then a movie called Beat Street, but  "Breakin'2-Electric Boogaloo" topped them all and became a national and  world-wide immediate hit with the young audience. It was 1985 and even today, I  still get fan mail from people who say that this movie influenced them as  teenagers. Incidentally, two weeks ago it came out on DVD.

I have been  told that on e-bay original posters and laser discs go for about $200- $300  apiece! It became an icon of the 1980's.

FA: In Ninja 3 you worked for the second  time with actress Lucinda Dickey. How was it working with her?

SF: Coming  from a dance background, she easily adapted to the ninja moves. Lucinda was not  a martial artist, but she quickly caught on. Ninja 3 was the first time I worked  with her; Breakin2 was the second movie.

FA: Talking about Ninja 3, is this the  weirdest ninja-movie ever made?

SF: Yes! And the only one with a ninja hero  that is a woman.

FA: I can�t say Michael Dudikoff is one of  my favorite actors but I always enjoys American Ninja 1 and 2. How was it  working with mr Dudikoff and what�s your personal opinons on these  movies?

SF: Michael was the perfect American Ninja  teenage idol type, with his James Dean demeanor. The first American Ninja is  definitely one of my favorites with a wholesome and reluctant hero and with an  innocent love story. It has very juicy villains. The second American Ninja does  not have as good a story as the first movie. It would have been better if it had  continued the themes of the first movie, but unfortunately it did  not.

FA: Haven�t seen Avenging force, but friends  tell me that it�s one of the most solid movies in Dudikoffs career. Can you tell  me more about making this movie and working with Dudikoff?
SF: Not only is it a solid movie for  Dudikoff, but it is a solid action movie period. Michael is great, the action is  magnificent, the visuals are terrific. The story takes place in New Orleans so  the atmosphere is charged with mystery and the lead villain, John P. Ryan, is  the best villain ever! When it came out the movie got some great reviews - too  bad it is not as famous as American Ninja.

FA: I always love productions from Nu Image  and also, of course, the Cyborg Cop-series. In the first one John Rhys-Davies  played the bad guy. He�s a solid actor and is now more famous than ever after  appearing in the Lord of the rings-trilogy. How was it working with him and  David Bradley in Cyborg Cop. Was it and it�s sequel big  hits?

SF: John Ryhs-Davies is the greatest! Such a  nice person to work with and extremely talented, full of creative ideas, and  very accommodating to the director. He is a classically trained British actor.  David Bradley is less of an actor but more of a martial artist so he brought  this talent to the movie. The Cyborg movies did not reach the success of the  American Ninja series in popularity.

FA: Most of your movies, at least the Ninja-  and cyborg-movies have been very violent and sometimes genreated moral panic in  countries with harder censorship rules. What do you think about the graphic  violence in your movies and the censorship?

SF: I would like to know in which countries  the movies created a moral panic. but on a more serious note, there is an  audience for all types of entertainment. I always try to keep the violent action  in a cartoon-like atmosphere so that we don't confuse what we see on the screen  with reality. I stay away from sadistic themes, and never have violence against  women or children, and always stay in the realm of "movie-land." In principle I  am against censorship and the rating system should provide viewers with  guidelines to the content of the movie so that the viewers can make the choice  whether to see the movie.

FA: You worked as a second-unit director on  Crocodile, once again for Nu Image. Was it easy to work with Tobe Hooper and  what do you think of the movie?

SF: Tobe and I are good friends; I know him  for many years, since we both worked at Cannon Films where he directed the movie  Life Force. Tobe entrusted me with all the action-y sequences of the Crocodile  movie and basically I did my best to accommodate his movie.
FA: I actually hold a dvd of Spiders 2 in my  hand this weekend, but I was broke right then and couldn�t afford buying it, so  I haven�t had the pleasure of seeing it yet. Are you happy with the final  result?

SF: Spiders2 is a complex movie from an  optical effects standpoint. It has 160 optical effects. One thing I learned is  that when you work with a low budget you don't get the same quality of results  that the big budget movies get. But yet, it is a considerably scary and tense  horror picture.

FA: To be honest, I first thought it was  something for April Fools Day, but you are nowdays co-director with Ed Wood?  Appearently, after reading at your official site, the raw material for an  unknown Ed Wood-movie has been found and you have directed an additional 30  minutes of scenes and now completed this movie. When can we see this movie? Will  hope for a nice dvd-release with lot�s of extras :) I�ve only seen pictures from  the new scenes, is there any pictures from the old material and have you been  able to identify the orignal actors and actresses?

SF: A lot of information concerning your  question is coming soon on our website surplusmale.com. I believe you will find  all the information as the updates and pictures are posted and the site  develops. This is an extremely exciting project but we do not yet have a release  date. It might go to sci-fi festivals first, so stay tuned.
FA: A final word to our readers?
SF:  The greatest satisfaction of  my work is to know that there are people all over the world who enjoy the movies  that I have directed. This is the reason I make movies - to entertain audiences,  and take them into a 90 minute journey of fantasy, thrill, and excitement. If  all of this works, then I am grateful.
*****Interview conducted by  contributing writer, Fred Anderson*****
On behalf of myself and  everyone here at Cinema Nocturna, I would like to thank Mr. Firstenburg for  allowing us to have a chance to interview him and for his time and  thoughts.
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