The Karate Kid was a hugely popular 1984 drama by John G Avildsen who had also directed the original fighting classic
Rocky. The new kid in town (Ralph Macchio), targeted by karate-kicking bullies, gets himself a mentor in the form of the Japanese handyman (Pat Morita) from his apartment building. The mentor teaches him self-confidence, fighting skills and the art of karate. The screen partnership of Macchio's motor-mouth character and Morita's reserved father figure works well and the script allows for the younger man to develop sympathy for the painful memories of his teacher. But the film's real engine is the fighting, and there's plenty of that. The film went on to breed many Karate Kid wannabes in the mid-80s.
Literally picking up about five minutes after the conclusion of the original, the 1986 sequel The Karate Kid 2 sends Ralph Macchio's and Pat Morita's characters to the latter's home turf in Japan, where the older man is confronted by an old rival, and Macchio's newly confident fighter gets a tougher challenge than the punks back home. Sillier than its predecessor, this follow-up at least has some distracting soap opera elements as Morita comes to terms with an old flame, while Macchio woos a lovely local girl. Ironically, it's the action that evokes laughter, particularly a climactic fight that gets over the top quickly. --Tom Keogh,
In a vain effort not to let a good thing die, director John G Avildsen attempted once more to revive the action and popularity of the original Karate Kid with the 1989 adventure, the third and final instalment. More silly and absurd than either of its predecessors Karate Kid 3 marked the final outing for the "Kid" Macchio (who was now 27) and his mentor, as the youth audience of the day moved away from the desire to be Karate Kids and toward the need to be Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles instead. --Nikki Disney
Product Description
The first three Karate Kid films, collected together in a box set. In the first, Daniel (Ralph Macchio) moves from New Jersey to California with his mother. He is bullied at his new school, most notably by a gang of karate trained creeps. Daniel takes up with their leader's girlfriend, making things even worse, until he begins to learn karate from his building's janitor, Miyagi (Pat Morita). In the second, Daniel accompanies his teacher Miyagi to his home island of Okinawa. Miyagi has not seen his homeland in 40 years, on account of a vicious feud with an old friend over the affections of a woman. Meanwhile Daniel is in similar trouble after falling for a girl who has captured a bully's fancy. Finally in the third, upon his return to LA, Danny is emotionally blackmailed into defending a championship title he doesn't want, and becomes upset when his mentor Mr Miyagi refuses to train him for the bout. Who is behind this troubling turn of events? None other than Danny's old enemy Kreese (Martin Kove).
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