At 25, ‘The Karate Kid’ Still Packs a Punch
by Leo GrinLooking back at The Karate Kid (1984), which turned twenty-five years old this week, a thought keeps recurring.
Wow. . . Avildsen made it work twice.
John G. Avildsen is, in some ways, a director of little distinction when compared with well-known marquee names like Spielberg, Scorsese, Nolan, and Tarantino. The vast majority of his movies are utterly forgotten by the average filmgoer — indeed, he’s been nominated for Worst Director at The Razzies three times. And yet, like Victor Fleming decades earlier with his twin successes The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind (both 1939 — read a great recent article on Fleming here), Avildsen has twice punched way above his weight, netting himself an Oscar for Best Director and giving birth to some of the most memorable moments in motion picture history.
His first triumph, made on a shoestring budget and a scant few weeks of shooting time, was a little picture called Rocky (1976). He had no money, no stars, no amazing effects, and yet Avildsen used camera, music, and editing to craft scenes of immense power and impact. Has there ever been a film, before or since, that ends on a more rousing wave of uplift? That takes such pains to create identification and empathy with its wide array of characters? That more patiently or expertly builds up to its cataclysmic swell of emotion? That has the guts and sense of timing to fade to black at the exact peak, frustrating our desire to know what happens next even as it leaves us too blissful to care?
Rocky did all of that and much more, and despite its fight scenes now looking like slow-mo hokum compared to the MMA-style mayhem that now rules on TV, it remains the most memorable and effective boxing film ever made. That’s really saying something, given the immense amount of solid competition the genre boasts.
But as other directors began ineptly looting and mimicking Avildsen’s style and innovations, it looked as if everything that made Rocky great would quickly become so cliché as to make a repeat impossible. We all know that sinking feeling when we begin perceiving the clunky wheels of the typical “Hollywood sports plot” turning — that excruciatingly slow crawl towards the utterly predictable final showdown, where the very last seconds of a contest are shamelessly milked until the hero finally hits the last shot/punch/goal/basket. Even the Rocky sequels couldn’t escape these pitfalls, and it would be hard to blame an audience for glumly concluding that Avildsen’s 1976 artistic triumph had spoiled the sports movie for all time.
So who would have guessed that, eight years later, Avildsen would essentially pull off the same trick again? How on earth did he once again make a Rocky-style plot arc work, without the end result becoming a pale pastiche?
He achieved this feat in large part by turning everything we remember from Rocky on its head. Ralph Macchio’s Daniel Larusso is played not as a thickheaded lummox, but as a fast-thinking, bone-skinny teen whose nasal Jersey whine sounds more like Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer than Sylvester Stallone. He’s neither a down-and-out fighter with his best years behind him, nor is he looking to “go the limit” to prove something profound to himself. He’s just a kid at the very beginning of his adult life, who for most of the film limits his ambition to simply not getting beat up. Similarly, Elizabeth Shue’s Ali Mills is light years away from Talia Shire’s Adrian Pennino: rich instead of poor, charming rather than an ugly duckling, sociable not shy. And Pat Morita’s unforgettable Mr. Miyagi isn’t washed up or pathetically ambitious like Burgess Meredith’s Mickey Goldmill — he’s the very epitome of contentment and balance and wisdom.
Rocky achieved its verisimilitude with generous dollops of grime, rust, blood and profanity, whereas The Karate Kid is notable for its relative wholesomeness (note how Elizabeth Shue even wears a one-piece swimsuit to the beach instead of the obligatory teen-movie bikini). The music marks yet another telling departure. Rocky’s iconic score, by Bill Conti, was a mix of 1970s funk, heroic brass, and a choir acting as a Greek chorus, all combined into a sonic brew that still ranks as one of the most recognizable and rousing in film history. For The Karate Kid, Conti was once again brought in as the composer. But this time, in between pop songs like Bananarama’s “Cruel Summer,” he chose a light mix of delicate strings, only occasionally allowing them to burst forth into full orchestral splendor. For the training montage, Conti completely eschews Rocky’s reliance on trumpeting brass and instead opts for the lonely skirling of Gheorghe Zamfir’s pan flute, creating a more spiritual and intimate vibe.
Avildsen’s camera, for its part, is probing and observant, often making excellent use of telephoto lenses to highlight what would otherwise be a missed reaction or expression. He achieves true poetry in the training scenes: on the beach among the circling cranes, on the lake amidst glittering golden waters, and even in the fights and strategies that pulse through the climactic tournament. He also warred with the studio when necessary to protect certain crucial scenes, such as the one where a drunken Miyagi reveals his service in WWII to Daniel. That one adds a whole new layer of depth to what was already a touching and authentic relationship, and yet the studio wanted it cut, deeming it superfluous.
On top of all that, the excellent screenplay by Robert Mark Kamen (who distinguished himself more recently by penning the immensely satisfying kidnap flick Taken) consistently leads Avildsen down novel paths. The teen villains of the story (portrayed by, among others, Steve McQueen’s son Chad and Elizabeth Shue’s brother Andrew) are refreshingly human, at times even gaining our sympathy. Unlike the usual faceless, gormless teens in Hollywood fare, this group is delineated exceedingly well, and remain recognizable as individuals even when hiding behind Ray Harryhausen-esque skeleton makeup in a genuinely chilling night scene. Kamen fleshed out his bad guys so well that the Cobra Kais, led outside the dojo by actor William Zabka’s smirking blond-haired bad boy Johnny Lawrence, now have a sizable fan following among Karate Kid aficionados. One admirer even made a clever YouTube re-edit of the final fight so that Johnny wins:
Meanwhile, a band called No More Kings has made a song about the redemption of Johnny called “Sweep the Leg,” with a fun “Karate Kid continuation” music video written and directed by Zabka himself:
In interviews, Zabka has expressed pleasant surprise that The Karate Kid remains so alive in the popular culture, calling it a “sacred film” and noting that there are even Cobra Kai bowling teams out there. It’s enough to convince me that The Karate Kid II should have been all about Miyagi reforming the Cobra Kais, slowly rehabilitating them into good guys.
In so many ways, Avildsen’s 1984 film is courageous in the way it deviates from the instantly recognizable Rocky formula. How strong must the pressure have been on Avildsen to make the easy, safe choices, mimicking his earlier masterpiece in every detail? His resistance to those impulses does him credit, and hence to dismiss The Karate Kid as a mere Rocky clone is to do it an injustice.
But if there is one overriding secret to the success of The Karate Kid, it is the transcendent performance of Pat Morita as Mr. Miyagi. In 1984, most Americans still conceived of the East, at least in cinematic terms, as a mystical wonderland of Kung-Fu magic and swordplay. Hong Kong directors like Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, John Woo, Tsui Hark, and Ringo Lam were only beginning to create the explosion of masterful, modernized pictures that would eventually change the entire way the world looked at Asians on film. It’s hard to remember how utterly fresh a character like Mr. Miyagi was to 1984 audiences, completely unexposed as they were to the renaissance happening in Hong Kong. Fully fleshed out, with a compelling backstory and potent motivations, he was written as charmingly colloquial and disheveled, a character who could consistently shatter the stereotype of the “magic Asian” to raucously humorous effect.
Almost always in American cinema — to this day — Asian protagonists are depicted as cardboard caricatures at best and laughingstocks at worst. Avildsen rejected the initial front-runner for the part of Miyagi — the great Japanese actor Toshirô Mifune — and instead bet his entire film on the talents of a thoroughly Americanized stand-up comedian, one who in his salad days used to bill himself in comedy clubs as “the Hip Nip.” Comedians have a strangely robust record of shining in good dramatic roles — think Robin Williams, Bill Murray, Jim Carrey, Tom Hanks, Billy Crystal, Steve Martin, et al. — and they often manage to strike a solid balance between laughs and drama. Morita did exactly that in The Karate Kid: affecting just the right Japanese accent, leavening his character’s power and seriousness with just enough comedy, and always figuring out ways to make you laugh with Miyagi instead of at him.
If you haven’t seen The Karate Kid in awhile, you’re in for a treat — Mr. Miyagi was no fluke, he remains one of the most winning characters in the history of cinema. It was the role of a lifetime for Morita, who garnered a well-deserved Oscar nomination (as it happened, he lost that year to Haing S. Ngor in The Killing Fields, who himself became the first Asian to win an acting Oscar). Any number of others would have played Miyagi as either an embarrassing joke or an irremediably grim Samurai grandmaster. But in his every glare, mannerism, and pose, Morita elevates the character into a veritable Gandalf. Look closely at the scene when he bows gravely to a shocked Daniel (who has just discovered that his hated chores were actually important lessons), or when towards the end he smacks his hands together with such orchestra-enhanced thunder that the audience jumps. In those moments The Karate Kid — so often seen as an also-ran and afterthought to Rocky — breaks away from that film’s orbit and soars free all on its own.
So Avildsen pulled it off not once, but twice — I still can’t believe it. And if he never makes another great movie, he can still sit back and rest easy, secure in the knowledge that two of the very best fight pictures ever made have his name on them. That he did both of them on such low budgets should give hope to conservative filmmakers who assume liberal Hollywood will never give them a chance. There is nothing in The Karate Kid that couldn’t be accomplished on a micro-budget — all you would need is the gumption to dream up the script.
But will anyone take on the challenge, as Avildsen did those many years ago? Only time will tell. Until then: wax on, wax off. . . wax on, wax off. . . .














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76 Comments
Nice review. I loved the movie and Pat Morita was really quite excellent.
Thank you for the great recap. Makes me want to see it again. The Karate Kid is often used when analyzing a well-done screenplay. Really, the only problem with it is that Miyagi really should speak English better after 40-some years in America.
Well said. On rare occasions when a serious artist uses plot and character instead of glamour, star power and big $ CGI, a masterpiece may emerge that will stand the test of time.
I can't believe you forgot to mention Joe Esposito's epic "You're the Best" from the tournament montage. Cinema gold!
I dug this out about a month ago and it still holds up after 25 years. I'm sure a lot of people will (or continue to) write it off as some 80s adolescent flick, but yeah – it's so much more
ok movie that is far better in memory than in actuality; however it did have essential truths to it and as such it is a minor classic.
Best John G Avildsen film? Obviously there's 'Rocky' – but we are quite fond of 'Joe' with the late great Peter Boyle in a reactionary performance, along with a doe eyed Susan Sarandon and Dennis Patrick in a career defining performance.
Not sure why it's not on more folk's radar- could be the Archie Bunker on steroids take by Boyle…
Hey, anybody up for a clever edit of Crossroads so that Steve Vai beats Macchio? That's the way I always wanted it to go.
This has always been a favorite of mine. I truly appreciated the way the spiritual aspects of the martial arts were given the front stage instead of the mechanics.
This movie fired on all cylinders. It covered the angst of being the new kid in a very foreign land (New Jersey to CA….ugh). It showed that with improper guidance, kids can be twisted into something they are not (Martin Grove's iron fist with his Cobra Kais) and with the proper guidance kids will find their inner strength.
It did all this with humor and superior acting.
And if anyone out there says they never tried the Crane Kick, then they're lying…..
Agreed, my Sifu was very big on this with new students. "Kung Fu is not about being able to beat someone up, it's about spiritual growth and from that growth you will find strength and peace."
He made everyone recite that before class.
Kinda makes you antsy for the Will Smith/Will Smith's son/Jackie Chan remake, doesn't it?
In all seriousness, I really enjoyed this post. This is one of my all-time favorite movies, and thanks for pointing out that this week is its 25th anniversary. It's too bad I don't know of any theaters showing any anniversary screening. Even though I'm sure I'll see Transformers later this week, I'd much rather spend my money waxing nostalgic with Daniel-San and Miyagi.
the mark of a true teacher
Gotta disagree here. One of my friends is from Taipei. She learned English in school there, married an American and moved here to the Us with him over 25 years ago when she was 22. . . . and her English is barely intelligible through how thick her accent is. Oh she understands you perfectly, but she's simply hard to understand in return.
In Miyagi's story he came to the US in late teens or early 20's same as my friend did — plenty late enough to have his basic speech patterns to a point where they'd be hard to alter, even after 40 years of speaking a different language.
For what it's worth, IMO the Miyagi character speaks much better English than my friend does.
tell me about it. I was dragged from New York to So CA during my junior year in High School so that was so another level for me to relate.
Is it wrong that I love "You're The Best"? As cheesy as it is, that song is great, and one of the most memorable parts of The Karate Kid.
"It’s enough to convince me that The Karate Kid II should have been all about Miyagi reforming the Cobra Kais, slowly rehabilitating them into good guys."
Dude, you just blew my mind. That would have been awesome!
Yes, and then he sadistically trained the crap out of us…….oh the pain……
Wow, I admire your strength bro!!
It's wrong on so many levels, and I'm right there with you!!!
in our experiences, instructors would truly enjoy when a bully-boy type came in and wanted to train (of course they just wanted to be more effectively violent) and they would be give simple strength tests.
In Asian martial arts it is the strength of the ligaments and flexibility of the skeletal system that provides the 'punch', as it were. 'Gym' muscles count for little. So, the expressions on their faces when they couldn't perform things 14 year old girls could do with little effort was, as MasterCard would say, 'Priceless'…
And, of course the better you got the less violence was an option. Inner calm can do that for a person…
I loved 'Rocky'. However, if Joe Frazier is not cashing royalty checks from the movie grafting his real-life battle with Ali onto the screen in the character of Rocky Balboa, something is seriously amiss.
Brawler from the slums of Philly? Check.
Fought an arrogant, loud-mouthed, showboat (who was also one of the greatest boxers of all time) for the title? Check.
Trained by punching sides of beef in meat processing plant? Check.
Though he weakened his foe with devastating body shots, he also seemed intent on blocking his foe's jabs with his face? Check.
Lost an epic fight in which both men nearly beat the other to death? Check. (Thrilla in Manilla, Oct. 1, 1975)
Smokin' Joe even made a cameo in the film. Hope he got more than that.
toughened me up indeed.
the more we bleed in training, the less we bleed in battle.
Off topic:
How long before the zombie invasion?? I mean it's just a matter of time, right????
Being from Philly, I can confirm everything you posted. Smokin' Joe WAS Rocky Balboa for real.
Could someone re-edit the guitar duel scene from Crossroads so that Vai beats Macchio? That's the way I always wanted it to go.
Yet Stallone claims that his inspiration for the film was Chuck Wepner's challenge of Ali for the title.
Yes, it is obvious to a fan of boxing that Stallone lifted much of Frazier's life for that film.
It's already happened up here in Michigan. Of course it all started out with the super secret reanimation experiments going on in the underground lab complex beneath Ft Knox (which is mostly just a cover for what's really going on).
Check it out here:
http://zombieapocalypsemovie.com/
Yes I'm in it (playing two different zombies, a stunt zombie and as one of the supporting characters) as well as did the fight/stunt choreography. We've been cruising the horror/scifi/comic conventions and will be starting production on number 2 in 2011. I'm hoping to get dragged behind a moving truck in this one.
We get a few of those once in a while over at the Gathering of the Packs in Los Angeles. They rarely last past the warm up rounds and never come back.
And yes, Priceless indeed!
I showed this to my 13-year old daughter a few weeks ago and it really stands up well, even if Daniel is more of a whiner than I remember. One reason I show the kids movies like this is so they can get all the references in later movies and tv shows. How many times have you seen the crane pose, or heard 'wax on, wax off'?
In reality, didn't he really record both parts for the movie?
Big don't spell Bad….
Another of my Sifu's nuggets….
That is so freakin cool!!!
This isn't the adaptation of Max Brooks' latest is it?
Alot of concepts were borrowed from his first book, and I was responsible for the line "Blades don't need reloading" getting put into the script when I put together the climatic fight between the two top characters near the end. I also worked in a bit of slapstick wherever I could (all hail Sam Raimi and the Three Stooges).
And just about everyone on the crew and many of the actors did have a copy of that book in their personal libraries. When it first came out, my wife bought about 15 copies to pass out to family members and friends to help prepare them for the coming "end times", LOL.
Our producer/director is fleshing out the script for Zombie Apocalypse II right now and has me started on piecing together some of the stunts he wants to see.
our more unfortunate experience was being the, ahem, the 'big guy type' in early lessons, and being called on to show everyone just how more diminuitive types could toss us around with abandon…
it was embarrasing as heck!
Wow, that is awesome.
I heard on JoBlo.com that they're trying to make World War Z into a movie. I hope it's not as preachy as the book….
I've heard something along those lines too. Would be interesting to see.
We had a guy join up and he was a mountain. About 6'4" and easily 250lbs. The Sifu, 5'6" and about 140lbs soaking wet put this guy down without batting an eye.
As he was holding the guy down on the mat he calmly spoke to the rest of the class, "Big don't spell Bad"
Amen to that….
embarrasing perhaps, but as many of my instructors would always say, the best seat in the house for seeing how a technique is done is being on the receiving end.
'Joe' is a dandy.
I remember first seeing it and thinking Peter Boyle was just a real guy they put in the movie. Scary.
'Hey Joe, don't it make you wanna to go to war…once more?"
and we indeed saw that… being a former tough military type didn't make it any easier; humility is the single toughest thing to learn…
But extremely rewarding. Best thing we ever did…
Hank Scorpio
When this movie first came out a lot of people I knew said it was hokey, that someone of Macchio's size being that tough was laughable….
I would then introduce them to a really good friend of mine. He was, like your instructor, maybe 5' 5" and 140lbs. He had studied multiple arts since he was about 6 yrs old.
Anyways he had this little trick I would always ask him to do that changed skeptical mind instantly. I don't know the technical name for it , but he would do a (I think it's called a roundhouse) kick and bring the heel of his foot over the top of my head (yes I was the guinee pig). This doesn't sound like much until I tell you that I'm 6' 3" tall. I still can't figure out how he did that!
We where young dumb kids, but it was so cool to watch. He did miss once however! All I can say is that it hurt like hell after I woke up……..
Sounds like that fella and my old teacher were cut from the same cloth.
Then I had a lot of great seats…..
and we never had to pay for them.
well, not in cash anyway.
Johnny's redemption at the end is also worth it. When Kreese tells him to sweep Daniel's wounded leg, the look of horror – and dawning realization that his Sensei would rather punish a wounded opponent than win fairly – tells you exactly what's going on in Johnny's mind…all in about three seconds.
Indeed, that part was not lost on me either. Not all are beyond hope.
we only wished that they wouldn'y have singled us out with such devious glee…
when new students signed up (often!) it was time to drop us somehow, choke or pressure holds, sweeps- you name it. Once again- the humility thing…
Guess we needed it…
I still prefer Chuck Norris and Jonathan Brandis karate style cornyness in "Sidekicks"
You're right JSC, adults have a very tough time losing their foreign accents. I have worked with & for many immigrants, & you can almost always hear an accent of some kind, sometimes very heavily. I believe one factor is the age of the person at the time of immigration, for usually their children have little to no accent at all.
Dangit, now I have to watch the Karate Kid again. Thanks so much, for reminding me of a great movie!
The "Training Hard" sequence, with Zanfir, or whatever his name is, on panflute always touches me. Almost want to call it baroque Japanese music. It went another way than Rocky's epic "Gonna Fly Now," appropriately enough since karate is much more delicate than boxing. Makes me want to be disiplined and practice something, if only for a moment.
Not to mention that Miyagi was a loner. Probably didn't have that much to say to anyone before Daniel came along.
More than the song itself, I like seeing the psychotic Billy Idol-esque guy get his ass kicked.
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This is why I hang out at Big Hollywood. What a beautiful essay, with such attention to detail and imagery, about a timeless movie that will give joy to people for generations to come.
Undeniable that Stallone used a lot of Joe. But it wasn't all Joe. First of all, obviously, Rocky was white, so the racial politics were different.
Secondly, and more importantly, Rocky was a never-has-been, whereas Joe was always world-class.
Thirdly, the fight was a lot less like the Thrilla in Manilla than the Wepner brawl. Rocky had no chance to beat Apollo, whereas Joe had a very legitimate shot at Ali. Ali-Wepner was a meaningless exhibition, whereas the Thrilla was a championship bout and the third match in perhaps the greatest boxing rivalry of the 20th century.
I saw this at 11 and was blown away. I've got it on DVD and it definitely holds up–not just through the rose-colored glasses of time and memory. The second one was also good. The third one wasn't, but it has its charms. I even don't hate Next KK (sue me). Heck, it's got an Eve's Plum song and Swank–whom I usually don't find very attractive–was pretty hot. Heh.
Smokin' Joe is my favorite fighter of all time.
Forget the Thrilla in Manilla — after the '71 fight in the Garden, the AP wire ran a story (quickly corrected) that Frazier had died in the hospital.
Not surprised that Philly would put up a statue of Stallone instead of Frazier — they used to boo Mike Schmidt, for pete's sake.
Actually, Ali agreed to the fight because he thought Frazier was washed up. Frazier had been knocked down 6 times in a 2nd round KO loss to George Foreman, who Ali had in turn KO'd in 1974. Frazier also received a fraction of what Ali got for the fight.
However, you are correct in that Frazier was at least seen as a "has-been", not as the "never-was" that characterized both Wepner in real life and Balboa on screen.
tublecane:
I agree with your second and third points, but if anything, the racial politics of Ali v. Frazier were far nastier than a simple question of white and black boxing fans backing "their" guy.
The race hustlers dubbed Joe "the white man's champ" — and remember the other word that rhymes with "thrilla" and "Manila" — "gorilla?" — which Ali called Frazier repeatedly during the pre-fight hype.
Ali was a great fighter, but I consider him to be one of the biggest a-holes in the history of sports.
it did have a scary real quality to it; it was a huge hit as well. It just NEVER shows up on the tube…
Two things I didn't particularly like were how much of a whiner Daniel is, and that he always called his teacher "Mr. Miyagi" in that awful twang. Why didn't he ever call him Sensei, or at least Miyagi-san?
Indeed, the kid had something in him that was worth saving.
Makes me thing of Kwai Chang. RIP David C.
NO! It's 80s movies perfection. It's to "Karate Kid" what "Eye of the Tiger" was to "Rocky III." Never feel ashamed!
Okay, I did notice that this article actually acknowledged that Karate Kid was written by a screenwriter
(Robert Mark Kamen), but otherwise, this article gives the impression that John G. Alvidsen WROTE these two films – as if he created the characters, the plot, etc, from nothing … Um, NO.
Ugh.
Too bad the Rocky sequels failed to replicate the appeal of the original by being truly ensemble stories,
(in which the various supporting characters were fully realized), like the original was.
Also, as a martial artist (since 1975), I can't stand the ridiculousness of that stupid "crane" stance which the kid used throughout the film. It's just unbearably false, foolish, etc. There's other very hokey stuff too (probably the training methods), but it's hard to remember details, because I haven't seen that film in 25 years (it was hard to watch the whole thing even just once). Yuck!!!
At least horse dung serves as fertilizer, and doesn't delude anyone about reality.
Love the movie… I hated the start of the sequel though. Kind of made the first one seem less, like the Matrix sequels.
Not that it means anything in the movie. I believe he was played by Steve McQueen son.
I guess I'm too young to have ever thought of The Karate Kid as a rip off of anything, certainly not Rocky. It seemed totally new and original to me. Of course, that was 25 years ago.
"Actually, Ali agreed to the fight because he thought Frazier was washed up"
If true, he was arrogant or foolish or both. Then again, he underestimated the guy in the first place, so no big surprise. If it were me, I might be wary of the first guy who ever beat me. Foreman notwithstanding, since, as we all know, different fighters match up differently.
I feel I should add that in addition to Frazier and Wepner, there is also the rather obvious inspiration of Rocky Marciano, what with the name, the Italian heritage, the "great white hope" aura, and the fighting style.
"if anything, the racial politics of Ali v. Frazier were far nastier than a simple question of white and black boxing fans backing 'their' guy"
Agreed. Internecine conflicts can be the nastiest of all. Just look at communists and fascists.
I was just saying the racial politics were different. Apollo exploits racial tensions to promote the fight in "Rocky," but not by attacling the white power structure, or saying he was going to take out the stress of centuries of slavery and Jim Crow on Rocky's face. It's subtler than that. He perceives that white fans get tired of watching black guys fight eachother. That they want to root for "one of their own," and that they'll do so even if it's a bum without a prayer of winning.
"Also, as a martial artist (since 1975), I can't stand the ridiculousness of that stupid 'crane' stance which the kid used throughout the film. It's just unbearably false, foolish, etc."
But it looks cool, which is the point.
"Really, the only problem with it is that Miyagi really should speak English better after 40-some years in America. "
He should.
On the other hand, my wife's aunt immigrated here 49 years ago – and she can't speak more than a few dozen words of English. She prefers Korean and has always managed to get by.
Brian
"If do right, can be no defense." Thanks for the walk down memory lane.
I just finished re-watching this movie because of this great review! I'm 31, and I've seen Karate Kid before, but I forgot how well-rounded and good it is. Over time, it's known for it's phrases ("Sweep the leg!") and cheesy 80s music, but it's one of those rare "teen" films that holds up over time. I loved the extras on the Special Edition DVD. Kreese is one of the more memorable bad guys in film history, amazing since he's only in the film for a few scenes.
Great, great review. We all need a Mr. Miyagi in our lives!!
[...] how time flies…this week is the 25th anniversary of the release of the classic summer blockbuster – The Karate [...]
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