Ninja Cheerleaders: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Highly-Visible Ninja]]: Kinji is the only ninja who averts this.
* [[Highly-Visible Ninja]]: Kinji is the only ninja who averts this.
* [[Idiosyncratic Wipe]]: The wipes are all montages that include one of the main characters, a ninja and a stripper dancing topless.
* [[Idiosyncratic Wipe]]: The wipes are all montages that include one of the main characters, a ninja and a stripper dancing topless.
* [[It Works Better With Bullets]]: The bolt gun.
* [[It Works Better with Bullets]]: The bolt gun.
* [[Ivy League for Everyone]]
* [[Ivy League for Everyone]]
* [[Karma Houdini]]: Al again. Courtney refuses to harm him.
* [[Karma Houdini]]: Al again. Courtney refuses to harm him.
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* [[Sword Sparks]]
* [[Sword Sparks]]
* [[Third Person Person]]: Kinji, when explaining how fast Kinji is.
* [[Third Person Person]]: Kinji, when explaining how fast Kinji is.
* [[What Happened to The Mouse?]]: Jimmy disappears from the movie after being stuffed into the trunk.)
* [[What Happened to the Mouse?]]: Jimmy disappears from the movie after being stuffed into the trunk.)


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{{reflist}}

Revision as of 22:53, 9 April 2014

Cheerleaders go up against the mob. No, really.

April, Monica and Courtney are three intelligent high-school girls who have intentions of going to Brown. They are also ninjas who work for the kindly old sensei Hiroshi. They moonlight as Go-Go dancers in Hiroshi's own club. Yeah.

The bad guy is one Victor Lazarro, a mobster who has just recently been paroled. See, Hiroshi bought the strip club from the IRS, who took it from Lazarro when he was convicted, and now he wants it back. To that end, he hires his girlfriend Kinji, a "dark ninja", to dispose of the three ninja cheerleaders and ensure that the deed to the club is signed over to him.

Also in the mix is Detective Harris, a detective investigating (presumably) the disturbance that opens the movie.

This movie contains examples of: