My sister and I are fans of the original movie (it was incredibly popular the summer after my sophomore year in high school) and my nephew is a big fan of the reboot so we obviously had to see the latest installment in the franchise, Karate Kid: Legends, together last night. I think it is a lot of fun and all three of us really liked it. Li Fong (Ben Wang) has been secretly studying kung fu with his great-uncle Mr. Han (Jackie Chan) in Beijing but his mother (Ming-Na Wen) forbids him to continue because her son and Li's older brother was killed by an opponent after a tournament. She takes a job in New York to get Li away from kung fu and hires a tutor (Wyatt Oleff) to encourage him to focus on his studies, instead. However, he soon befriends Mia Lipani (Sadie Stanley) and her father Victor (Joshua Jackson) and learns that he owes a great deal of money to a loan shark named O'Shea (Tim Rozon) who owns a dojo. He also runs afoul of Mia's ex-boyfriend Conor Day (Aramis Knight), a karate prodigy who trains with O'Shea. Li eventually decides to enter the Five Boroughs Tournament, an epic mixed martial arts competition, so he can give the prize money to Victor and so he can confront his demons over his brother's death. Mr. Han comes to New York to help train him and he also enlists Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) to train him in karate. Li makes it to the finals but he has to fight Conor, who has bested him in several skirmishes, and it all comes down to the "dragon," a flying kick that he learned from his brother. The story follows the exact same formula beat for beat as the previous movies and the outcome of the tournament is a foregone conclusion but Wang is so appealing in the role that he is easy to cheer for. There are some emotional themes but, for the most part, the tone is light and the action moves very quickly with dynamic and colorful titles and a bombastic score. I loved all of the fight sequences, especially when Li becomes the mentor in Victor's attempt to make a boxing comeback, when Han and Daniel try to demonstrate who has the best moves with Li as their unwitting victim, and Li's final stand-up-and-cheer move in the tournament. I also enjoyed all of the callbacks to the previous movies, especially a fun reference at the end. Fans of the franchise will definitely have a great time with this (audiences seem to be enjoying it more than the critics).
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