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Review: “Cobra Kai” hasn’t lost its fun, as it keeps “Karate Kid” close by

Crossing the streams with its sequels, the 5th season of “Snake Kai” has great similarities with the second and third films of “The Karate Kid” while continuing to carve out his own melodrama, all in an extraordinarily agile manner.

While it’s not the best TV series, there must be some sort of award for the best revival to date.

The inevitable battle of dojos duels in Season 4, which apparently saw every kid in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley practicing karate, left the region under the sway of Terry Silver (Thomas Ian Griffith ), who, like the Kreese character (Martin Kove ), found a dazzling encore in getting to reprise that villain role.

Still, to fight “Karate Kid III” villain Daniel (Ralph Macchio ) enlisted the “II” heavyweight, Chozen (Yuji Okumoto ), in an unlikely but utterly hysterical alliance.

Of course, there’s a lot more to it than that, with the often unlucky Johnny (William Zabka ) trying to navigate his romance with Carmen (Vanessa Rubio) and the feud between his son (Tanner Buchanan ) and hers (Xolo Maridueña ).

Children, in fact, have as many shifting loyalties as the older generation, whose AARP-qualified karate masters continue to prove remarkably agile.

The producers also remained quite resourceful in not just weaving old clips into the show where appropriate, but into familiar faces – which, again, shouldn’t be spoiled and seriously treat the original “Karate Kid” trilogy as if it were a mythical franchise, a crossover. land between “Star Wars” and “Star Trek”.

Like any show with so many school-age characters, “Cobra Kai” seems to be running out of story, at least in terms that can be followed by younger audiences.

Seasons have also started to exhibit a pattern, starting and ending with strong scenes while dragging a bit in between.

Even so, the show’s remarkable resilience so far — having started on YouTube before migrating to Netflix, where it blossomed into an Emmy-nominated hit — suggests it would be premature to disqualify it.

Plus, “Cobra Kai” once again demonstrated that all you really need is just one leg to keep fighting. Five seasons later, the series has surpassed any reasonable expectation, developing a life of its own that proves it wasn’t just the “Karate Kid” out there.

“Cobra Kai” premieres season 5 this Friday, September 9, on Netflix .

Source: CNN Brasil

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