Please Allow Us to Wax on About Cobra Kai, YouTube Red’s Fantastic Karate Kid Follow-Up
Photo: YouTube Red
Cobra Kai is a real television show.
Maybe this is obvious to some of you, but when YouTube Red first announced a TV series based on The Karate Kid story, the whole thing sounded like a joke: at best a campy, kitschy paean to 1980s nostalgia, at worst a crass money grab.
But the 10-episode series is neither. Instead, it’s a rich story that revisits Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) and Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka) 34 years after Daniel’s crane kick won him the karate tournament. But, as suggested by the title—which takes its name from Johnny’s dojo—the show has flipped the script, putting Johnny at the center. “My whole life went downhill with that kick,” Johnny says in the premiere. One of the biggest takeaways is that it’s all about perspective: My favorite moment in Cobra Kai finds Johnny re-telling the entire plot of the first movie from his point of view. Just as Wicked helped us see The Wizard of Oz from the Wicked Witch’s angle, Cobra Kai is Johnny’s story.
Time has not been kind to Johnny. He’s stuck in a dead-end job, living in a cluttered apartment, drinking way too much and estranged from his son. The series provides some backstory on what made Johnny the way he was. He might have grown up in a beautiful house, but ugly things were happening on the inside, where his verbally abusive stepfather (Ed Asner) berated him on a daily basis. Now Johnny is stuck in the past, still listening to music on his Walkman (Google it), unaware of what Facebook is and wallowing in political incorrectness. He’s like if Archie Bunker did karate. He calls any boy who appears weak a “princess.” When one of his students tells him he’s on the spectrum, Johnny replies, “I don’t know what that is, but get off it.” When a girl wants to join his class, he tells her women aren’t allowed in Karate for “the same reason there aren’t women in the army. Doesn’t make sense.”
Daniel, on the other hand, has a beautiful wife, Amanda (Courtney Henggeler), two children, a gorgeous house and string of car dealerships where every customer leaves with a bonsai tree. Over 10 episodes the series recreates the overarching plot of the first movie. Johnny meets Miguel (Xolo Mariduena), a geeky teen who’s picked on at school. Johnny’s troubled son, Robbie (Tanner Buchanan), starts working at Daniel’s dealership, at first to get back at his dad but soon because he realizes there’s much he can learn from Daniel. Daniel’s charming teenage daughter, Samantha (Mary Mouser), has fallen in with the popular kids at school and is dating the wrong guy. The kids have new ways of being cruel (viral GIFs and photo tagging), but the results are the same. Honestly I don’t want to say more than that about the plot because the show is so delightful that you deserve to watch it unfold for yourself.