Karate Kid May 2026
Pat Morita’s performance earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor—a rarity for a martial arts film. He brought a bottomless well of sadness and dignity to Miyagi. When he drinks sake in front of a photograph of his deceased wife, we feel the weight of a century. He is not a magical Asian mentor trope; he is a lonely survivor who finds purpose in saving a neighbor’s son.
Then came Cobra Kai (2018–present). The YouTube/Netflix series did the unthinkable: it inverted the narrative. By showing the world from Johnny Lawrence’s perspective—a washed-up, alcoholic handyman still haunted by a kick to the face 34 years prior—the series proved that The Karate Kid was never a simple story of good vs. evil. It was a story of trauma. Daniel is now a successful car dealer, but he is still obsessed with Cobra Kai. Johnny is a failure, but he has a code of honor Kreese never gave him. Karate Kid
What follows is the most subversive sequence in any sports film. Daniel expects high-flying kicks and punching drills. Instead, Miyagi puts him to work. “Wax on, wax off.” “Paint the fence.” “Sand the floor.” “Side to side.” He is not a magical Asian mentor trope;