Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAfter kung fu prodigy Li Fong relocates to New York City, he attracts unwanted attention from a local karate champion and embarks on a journey to enter the ultimate karate competition with t... Tout lireAfter kung fu prodigy Li Fong relocates to New York City, he attracts unwanted attention from a local karate champion and embarks on a journey to enter the ultimate karate competition with the help of Mr. Han and Daniel LaRusso.After kung fu prodigy Li Fong relocates to New York City, he attracts unwanted attention from a local karate champion and embarks on a journey to enter the ultimate karate competition with the help of Mr. Han and Daniel LaRusso.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Emile Pazzano
- Fan
- (non crédité)
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To talk about this movie, we have to start by saying how amazing it was to see Karate and Kung Fu mixed in just the right way, creating a great film with an original story that manages to please both longtime fans and new audiences alike.
I'd also like to briefly share a personal story. Karate has been present in my family for years, and we gathered on Mother's Day to watch this movie, which made it even more special for me. We're big fans of the franchise, and I'm truly grateful for this film, which I consider just as great as its predecessors.
Speaking of the cast, the new Karate Kid, Li Fong, played by Ben Wang, proved to be a perfect casting choice. He's just as good as the previous protagonists. His story starts out similar to Dre's, but as we get to know him better, we see that it's more moving than we expected. The way he tries to move forward through martial arts is truly inspiring.
When we talk about the cast, it's impossible not to mention Ralph Macchio and Jackie Chan, who are now tasked with training a new Karate Kid. Seeing them together again made me incredibly happy, and they manage to captivate fans of both the original trilogy and the 2010 movie.
As for Mr. Han, it was amazing to see him again. Honestly, I'd love to learn more about how he became such a great Kung Fu teacher. His relationship with Li Fong is very special, and the story between them adds more depth to the movie than I expected.
Regarding Daniel's return-someone we've seen a lot in Cobra Kai-it's always a joy to see him back. I was genuinely happy, though I did hope he'd have more screen time. Still, seeing him again was wonderful, and especially the scenes where he and Mr. Han team up to train the new Karate Kid-those were so much fun.
About Sadie Stanley, I really liked her character and her relationship with Li Fong. It's sweet, lighthearted, and makes the audience root for them as a couple.
Joshua Jackson, who plays her father, also did a great job. His character is funny and interesting, and his scenes with Li are quite engaging. Speaking of fun characters, Wyatt Oleff's character also stands out, bringing a lot of humor and lightness to the story.
Every Karate Kid movie has had villains that make us really angry, and this one is no different. Connor, played by Aramis Knight, is a very compelling character who gets under our skin, all thanks to Aramis's excellent performance.
Regarding the story and script-it's much deeper than I expected. The way Li Fong overcomes everything is truly inspiring, especially with the help of Mr. Han and Daniel LaRusso. On top of that, the fight scenes, as in every Karate Kid movie, are thrilling and incredible. All the professionals involved deserve praise.
So it's no exaggeration to say that this film is just as grand as the previous ones. It brings back nostalgic elements that longtime fans will appreciate, but also introduces fresh originality that can captivate even those who aren't fans of the franchise.
Finally, I'd like to thank everyone involved once again. I sincerely hope there will be future projects that are just as epic as this one. Thank you once again for being part of such a special moment in my life.
I'd also like to briefly share a personal story. Karate has been present in my family for years, and we gathered on Mother's Day to watch this movie, which made it even more special for me. We're big fans of the franchise, and I'm truly grateful for this film, which I consider just as great as its predecessors.
Speaking of the cast, the new Karate Kid, Li Fong, played by Ben Wang, proved to be a perfect casting choice. He's just as good as the previous protagonists. His story starts out similar to Dre's, but as we get to know him better, we see that it's more moving than we expected. The way he tries to move forward through martial arts is truly inspiring.
When we talk about the cast, it's impossible not to mention Ralph Macchio and Jackie Chan, who are now tasked with training a new Karate Kid. Seeing them together again made me incredibly happy, and they manage to captivate fans of both the original trilogy and the 2010 movie.
As for Mr. Han, it was amazing to see him again. Honestly, I'd love to learn more about how he became such a great Kung Fu teacher. His relationship with Li Fong is very special, and the story between them adds more depth to the movie than I expected.
Regarding Daniel's return-someone we've seen a lot in Cobra Kai-it's always a joy to see him back. I was genuinely happy, though I did hope he'd have more screen time. Still, seeing him again was wonderful, and especially the scenes where he and Mr. Han team up to train the new Karate Kid-those were so much fun.
About Sadie Stanley, I really liked her character and her relationship with Li Fong. It's sweet, lighthearted, and makes the audience root for them as a couple.
Joshua Jackson, who plays her father, also did a great job. His character is funny and interesting, and his scenes with Li are quite engaging. Speaking of fun characters, Wyatt Oleff's character also stands out, bringing a lot of humor and lightness to the story.
Every Karate Kid movie has had villains that make us really angry, and this one is no different. Connor, played by Aramis Knight, is a very compelling character who gets under our skin, all thanks to Aramis's excellent performance.
Regarding the story and script-it's much deeper than I expected. The way Li Fong overcomes everything is truly inspiring, especially with the help of Mr. Han and Daniel LaRusso. On top of that, the fight scenes, as in every Karate Kid movie, are thrilling and incredible. All the professionals involved deserve praise.
So it's no exaggeration to say that this film is just as grand as the previous ones. It brings back nostalgic elements that longtime fans will appreciate, but also introduces fresh originality that can captivate even those who aren't fans of the franchise.
Finally, I'd like to thank everyone involved once again. I sincerely hope there will be future projects that are just as epic as this one. Thank you once again for being part of such a special moment in my life.
The fights are bad, the story is bad, the characters are bad. Seems like they put in half effort on everything in this movie and hoped that Jackie Chan alone would make people want to watch this. I watched this movie for free and I still feel robbed, I could have spent that time doing anything else and it would've been better than sitting through this movie. The actor playing the main character didn't get in shape at all for this movie; he is built like a small girl and it's hard to believe he can punch through anything other than a wet paper napkin. Lastly kung fu is all but useless for self defense; however I can appreciate the stylish choreography it brings into movies like Ip Man. There was no such fancy eye candy choreography in this movie, and is possibly the worst martial arts movie I've ever seen.
I do not need to spoil anything nor do you read any synopsis. This is as generic, run of the mill, basic cliche story you can possibly find. You already know exactly what will happen and how it will end.
With that said seeing a typical 1980's storyline in modern format is kinda fun. Just because you know exactly what will happen in every scene does not necessarily mean this is a bad movie. The acting, from everyone, is also great which helps with the negatives.
What bothers me however is the fast pace. This is whooshing from one scene to the next, from one generic event to the next. No time to breath, no time to learn anything, and that Karate we need? Pfff, a week, tops! All you need. We have no time for anything but a quick montage and of course this kid can learn all he needs in a handful of scenes. Whoosh, whoosh... and whoosh.
The concept, albeit generic, is pretty good and this movie could easily have been a lot better. Extend this with 20min and then give the movie, the characters, and the point and ending more time to develop and breath. This is made for those (presumably American) kids of today who cannot do anything without flipping around 3 different screens at the same time. Or at least that seem to be the intended audience, whether or not those kids actually do exist.
Most is competent, okay, sometimes good due to the acting, but never great. This is an okay movie but generic with a fast-frw attitude. I give it a 5/10. Watchable, and I do recommend, but do not expect anything. This is okay for what it is, but it bothers me that they had a great movie on their hands and they wasted it.
With that said seeing a typical 1980's storyline in modern format is kinda fun. Just because you know exactly what will happen in every scene does not necessarily mean this is a bad movie. The acting, from everyone, is also great which helps with the negatives.
What bothers me however is the fast pace. This is whooshing from one scene to the next, from one generic event to the next. No time to breath, no time to learn anything, and that Karate we need? Pfff, a week, tops! All you need. We have no time for anything but a quick montage and of course this kid can learn all he needs in a handful of scenes. Whoosh, whoosh... and whoosh.
The concept, albeit generic, is pretty good and this movie could easily have been a lot better. Extend this with 20min and then give the movie, the characters, and the point and ending more time to develop and breath. This is made for those (presumably American) kids of today who cannot do anything without flipping around 3 different screens at the same time. Or at least that seem to be the intended audience, whether or not those kids actually do exist.
Most is competent, okay, sometimes good due to the acting, but never great. This is an okay movie but generic with a fast-frw attitude. I give it a 5/10. Watchable, and I do recommend, but do not expect anything. This is okay for what it is, but it bothers me that they had a great movie on their hands and they wasted it.
Why would you release a movie in Mexico and not rest of world. You yourself drop sales by doing stupid things. People are watching this world wide on social platforms different websites. Although I wouldn't watch it on cam or TS format. Cause I want to see it in cinema. But to be honest if I had three kids I would have watched it in cam or TS PLATFORM. I think because bosses are old and they probably don't know how quickly movie comes on websites. Movies come on websites on the day of premier. Not even first day. Camera are so sophisticated now days. That they can give clear picture and good voice from things recorded from theatres.
Simply. Ruined every thing after karate kid 3 and off course the amazing cobra Kai. Forget the stupid will smith kid version. That don't count. Just like this stupid attempt at something I have no clue about. Skip it. Watch the last ten minutes. And just hope for more WZ as JL stuff. Probably won't get a lot of happy faces on this review. But if you're born when I was then if you know you know.
Simply. Ruined every thing after karate kid 3 and off course the amazing cobra Kai. Forget the stupid will smith kid version. That don't count. Just like this stupid attempt at something I have no clue about. Skip it. Watch the last ten minutes. And just hope for more WZ as JL stuff. Probably won't get a lot of happy faces on this review. But if you're born when I was then if you know you know.
Simply. Ruined every thing after karate kid 3 and off course the amazing cobra Kai. Forget the stupid will smith kid version. That don't count. Just like this stupid attempt at something I have no clue about. Skip it. Watch the last ten minutes. And just hope for more WZ as JL stuff. Probably won't get a lot of happy faces on this review. But if you're born when I was then if you know you know.
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Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRalph Macchio will be 63 at the time of this film's release, 12 years older than Pat Morita was when Karate Kid (1984) was released.
- ConnexionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Part of Halle's World (2022)
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 11 500 000 $US
- Durée1 heure 34 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
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