In a modern-day tale of a young girl’s adventure to discover the truth about her family and her own destiny, ABC Family pulls back the veil on the mysterious world of Samurai legends in its new original production, “Samurai Girl.†Starring newcomer Jamie Chung as Heaven, who searches for truth, and Brendan Fehr (“Roswellâ€) as Jake, the one who may help her find it, ABC Family will air the six-hour event over three consecutive nights: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 (8:00 – 10:00 p.m. ET/PT), and continuing SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 (8:00 – 10:00 p.m. ET/PT) and SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 (8:00 – 10:00 p.m. ET/PT). The ensemble cast also includes Saige Thompson as Cheryl, Kyle Labine as Otto, Anthony Brandon Wong as Kogo, Steven Brand as Severin, Kenneth Choi as Sato, and features Stacy Keibler as Karen, Heaven’s romantic rival.
Based on a series of popular young-adult novels, “Samurai Girl†follows the journey of 19-year-old Heaven, the sheltered adopted daughter of one of Japan’s wealthiest and most powerful families. Protected and watched over at all times by her loving but enigmatic father, Heaven is raised in opulent but confined surroundings, with every detail of her life tended to and extravagantly provided for in the tradition of Japan’s hierarchal society. But when Heaven finds herself in San Francisco for her arranged wedding to the son of one of her father’s business associates, she has no idea that her protected life is about to be shattered and that her past is linked to an ancient secret prophecy which both good and evil forces will fight to the death to control.
As she reluctantly prepares for her nuptials, Heaven secretly hopes that her beloved brother, Hiko, will make a surprise appearance. As her closest friend in life, Heaven was devastated when Hiko left home after an intense disagreement with their father, bringing shame to the family, in their father’s eyes, and leaving him no choice but to disown his only son. When her father presents Heaven with the family’s ancestral sword, The Whisper of Death, she realizes that her hopes of seeing Hiko again will not come to pass. Saying that the sword represents the family’s undying devotion to the Samurai code of honor and loyalty, her father ignores Heaven’s plea that it should go to her brother, insisting that, because of Hiko’s disobedience, she is now his only heir, so the sword passes to her.
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