“…a Japanese
single mother arriving alone with her children to a foreign land known as
Staten Island.”
By Alan Ng
August 18, 2018
East meets Western in Justin Ambrosino’s short film,
First Samurai in New York. In the late 1800’s New York, Japanese single mother
Izumi Naito arrives with her children to a foreign land known as Staten Island.
Friendless and “different” Izumi’s gestures of friendship are rebuffed by her
irritable (dare I say racist) neighbor McGuire (Wayne J. Miller). Unsure of her
family’s, Izumi goes to Manhattan to look for potential new homes and leaving
her daughter Chiyo (Maho Honda) to watch over her young brother and sister, Ken
(Seika Atai) and Fuji (Asahi Ari).
Meanwhile, local thug Fig McHanan (Gabe Fazio) is making
the rounds collecting debts with the help of his heavy, Bull Doyle (Mike
Houston). The deadly pair moves on to their next victim, Izumi’s neighbor
McGuire. The duo drags McGuire outside to collect payment in either cash or
blood. Daughter Chiyo comes to the rescue using her deceased father’s samurai
sword and a few quick martial arts kicks, jabs, and punches.
Simply put, First Samurai in New York is an empowered
female, fish-out-of-water, martial arts fight, western short. Ambrosino’s film
succeeds on its simple story of heroism and the coolness factor of the samurai
in an old U.S. location.
Overall, the short is good but could have been great only
if it had been pushed a little harder. For example, the acting is just a little
too cliched for the time period giving it a spaghetti-western flavor and a
little too scripted and melodramatic. The film’s setting, location, and the
home are in desperate need of more interesting camera angles.
Most important, the reason this short exists is the gun,
sword, and martial arts fighting/choreography. While the fight was captured
well, a last-minute study in advanced fight scene cinematography would have
helped make the film even better.
Lastly, there’s a scene when Chiyo is teacher her sibling’s
sword fighting, and the sound effects are out of sync in just this moment.
Filmmaker Ambrosino has the story down. But next time,
consider playing around with allowing the camera to add drama to a scene versus
the camera merely capturing the drama of the scene.
First Samurai in New York (2018) Written and directed by
Justin Ambrosino. Starring Maho Honda, Gabe Fazio, Kyo Kasumi, Wayne J. Miller,
Mike Huston, Robert Privitera. First Samurai in New York screened in the
Western Block at the 2018 HollyShorts Film Festival.
6 out of 10 stars
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