Karate Kid: Legends
- 2025
- Tous publics
- 1h 34m
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 t... Read allAfter 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.
Olivia Yang Avis
- Young Girl
- (as Olivia Yang)
Mig Buenacruz
- Conor's Sparring Partner
- (as Miguelito Taylor Buenacruz)
Li Li
- Chinese Worker
- (as a different name)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This movie delivers a good dose of nostalgia while attempting to carve out its own path, though not always successfully. The characters, both new and returning, are undeniably charming. It's genuinely a pleasure to see familiar faces back in action.
The action sequences are surprisingly well-executed, boasting a decently done style that feels both modern and respectful of the franchise's roots.
Where the film stumbles is in its plot. While the main story unfolds exactly as you'd anticipate from a Karate Kid movie, a huge, wholly new subplot arrives almost entirely out of nowhere. This unexpected diversion nearly derails the movie, feeling jarringly out of place. On one hand, it's refreshing to see such a predictable franchise attempt something genuinely different. However, its resolution is incredibly abrupt, as if the filmmakers suddenly remembered they had to get back to the main plot, leaving the intriguing new elements feeling underdeveloped and rushed.
This rushed feeling extends to the film's overall pacing. At only 90 minutes, Karate Kid Legends is far too short. With so many new characters to introduce and returning characters to give their due, the movie feels like it's racing through its narrative. This is heavily emphasized by the sheer number of montages, which, while efficient, contribute to the sense of a story being told in fast-forward. The last 30 minutes in particular feel like a mad dash to a conclusion you've seen coming since the opening scene.
Ultimately, Karate Kid Legends possesses a nice and charming soul, a warmth that harks back to the original films. However, this inherent charm isn't followed through on almost any aspect. The film hints at deeper emotional beats and intriguing new directions but consistently pulls back, leaving you wishing it had committed more fully to its own potential. It's an enjoyable watch for fans, but one that leaves you wanting more substance beneath its familiar surface.
The action sequences are surprisingly well-executed, boasting a decently done style that feels both modern and respectful of the franchise's roots.
Where the film stumbles is in its plot. While the main story unfolds exactly as you'd anticipate from a Karate Kid movie, a huge, wholly new subplot arrives almost entirely out of nowhere. This unexpected diversion nearly derails the movie, feeling jarringly out of place. On one hand, it's refreshing to see such a predictable franchise attempt something genuinely different. However, its resolution is incredibly abrupt, as if the filmmakers suddenly remembered they had to get back to the main plot, leaving the intriguing new elements feeling underdeveloped and rushed.
This rushed feeling extends to the film's overall pacing. At only 90 minutes, Karate Kid Legends is far too short. With so many new characters to introduce and returning characters to give their due, the movie feels like it's racing through its narrative. This is heavily emphasized by the sheer number of montages, which, while efficient, contribute to the sense of a story being told in fast-forward. The last 30 minutes in particular feel like a mad dash to a conclusion you've seen coming since the opening scene.
Ultimately, Karate Kid Legends possesses a nice and charming soul, a warmth that harks back to the original films. However, this inherent charm isn't followed through on almost any aspect. The film hints at deeper emotional beats and intriguing new directions but consistently pulls back, leaving you wishing it had committed more fully to its own potential. It's an enjoyable watch for fans, but one that leaves you wanting more substance beneath its familiar surface.
It was a typical boy meets girl, girl has crazy ex story but it worked well.
I liked the combination of king fu and karate and liked that they also threw in some boxing too.
Jackie chan added some humour to it which was good.
Would have liked to have seen Daniel in it more but overall I was very impressed with the movie. Wasn't sure what to expect after cobra Kai and thought they would destroy the karate kid universe with this new film but I think it stands as a good film to join the universe of Miyagi Do.
Loved the very beginning when it explains the tie between kung fu and karate and loved the end just before the credits....that was a great well thought out touch.
Still felt it would have been nice for some of the cast from cobra Kai to make a slight cameo but the film was very fast paced so not a huge amount of time I guess.
I'll deff watch it again and will deff get the blu ray to add to the collection when it comes out.
I liked the combination of king fu and karate and liked that they also threw in some boxing too.
Jackie chan added some humour to it which was good.
Would have liked to have seen Daniel in it more but overall I was very impressed with the movie. Wasn't sure what to expect after cobra Kai and thought they would destroy the karate kid universe with this new film but I think it stands as a good film to join the universe of Miyagi Do.
Loved the very beginning when it explains the tie between kung fu and karate and loved the end just before the credits....that was a great well thought out touch.
Still felt it would have been nice for some of the cast from cobra Kai to make a slight cameo but the film was very fast paced so not a huge amount of time I guess.
I'll deff watch it again and will deff get the blu ray to add to the collection when it comes out.
I am not really the biggest Karate Kid fan, I have seen Cobra Kai and the first one but thats it. But watching the promotions and trailers I was kinda hyped for it cause I had not really seen a good one except Cobra Kai and the first one. Watching Karate Kid: Legends was kind of a mistake, It was pretty dissapointing.
To start off I liked the choreograph and the action. I liked the new karate kid he was not annoying but genuinally fine. It felt more as a nostalgic, fan-service type of movie which I definently expected. It could have been a great Karate Kid movie, but it just was not executed well. The characters were wasted and the writing was messy and all over the place. There are more issues but my and your attention span is lower than a goldfish so I aint writing it.
In conclusion: I give it a 6.0/10 could have been better...
To start off I liked the choreograph and the action. I liked the new karate kid he was not annoying but genuinally fine. It felt more as a nostalgic, fan-service type of movie which I definently expected. It could have been a great Karate Kid movie, but it just was not executed well. The characters were wasted and the writing was messy and all over the place. There are more issues but my and your attention span is lower than a goldfish so I aint writing it.
In conclusion: I give it a 6.0/10 could have been better...
Only the final scene with Johnny (after the fight) was good. The rest felt like a long cinematic from a Need for Speed game. Too rushed, too irrational, too obious and boring, too... American.
A weak scenario, with chinese people speaking English between them - so the brain of the average American viewer doesn't get overwhelmed, listening to a foreign language for more than 10 minutes.
Cliché scenes, typical disney-channel-like smart-ass dialogues, leading to an emotianlly weak, typical "I'm proud of you" moment.
If you are over 13 years old, don't waste your time with it. Watch the original one instead!
A weak scenario, with chinese people speaking English between them - so the brain of the average American viewer doesn't get overwhelmed, listening to a foreign language for more than 10 minutes.
Cliché scenes, typical disney-channel-like smart-ass dialogues, leading to an emotianlly weak, typical "I'm proud of you" moment.
If you are over 13 years old, don't waste your time with it. Watch the original one instead!
What Karate Kid Legends attempts is, in theory, an interesting experiment. It tries to pick up the thread left dangling at the end of Cobra Kai, while also tying it to a completely separate reboot from 2010 that never quite earned its place in the franchise. The result is a film that looks like it should have emotional weight but somehow feels like a corporate brainstorm session disguised as a sequel.
The nostalgic pull that once powered Cobra Kai is back, at least in intention. The show began with something rare, a sense of care for its legacy characters. Ralph Macchio and William Zabka were never reduced to sentimental walk-ons. They were fully fleshed-out leads, still shaped by their past but stumbling through the present with a level of emotional realism that surprised people. For a moment, it worked. The first two seasons had a charm that honored the original films without pandering. You could tell the people behind it actually loved the material.
But when Netflix stepped in for Season Three, something shifted. What began as a lean, character-driven revival turned into an overcrowded, hyperactive drama designed to feed on algorithmic success. It became more interested in spinning off plotlines and inflating rivalries than in deepening the characters it started with. The show leaned heavily on Karate Kid Part III, arguably the weakest installment of the original trilogy, and replicated its mistakes on a larger, glossier scale. What should have been emotionally intimate became bloated. Too many characters, too many arcs, and not nearly enough patience.
By the time the show ended, it was clear that the heart of Cobra Kai still resided in the performances of Macchio and Zabka, but the storytelling had been handed over to a different agenda, one that prioritized noise over nuance. The younger audience loved it, but there's a difference between engagement and emotional investment. Reddit may still be debating the motives of every secondary character, but that obsession with quantity says more about the current media landscape than it does about the story's quality.
So when Karate Kid Legends announced itself as a continuation, expectations were mixed. The decision to set the story three years after the series hinted at a deliberate effort to create space, to reset the tone and allow something new to develop. There is one well-placed cameo that acknowledges the past, but otherwise the film steers clear of the show's tangled narrative. This could have worked. The idea of Macchio returning as a mentor in a stand-alone story held potential. A full-length feature could offer emotional clarity that episodic television no longer had room for. This was a chance to return to character, to quiet moments, to storytelling with restraint.
But instead of using that opportunity, the film makes a strange and ultimately misguided decision. It chooses to merge its narrative with the 2010 remake of The Karate Kid, the one starring Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan. That film, while technically competent and commercially successful, was not a continuation of the original saga. It took the brand name, moved the story to China, and replaced karate with kung fu. Will Smith's production company had purchased the rights, and unsurprisingly, his son was cast in the lead. The film had moments of charm but lacked the emotional architecture of the original. It was a different story entirely, built on different values.
Bringing those elements into Karate Kid Legends creates a dissonance that never resolves. The new protagonist, Ali Fong, arrives in New York from China with his single mother. He is already highly skilled in kung fu, which undermines much of the tension that should come from a student's journey. The familiar beats are all here, a school setting, a love interest, a group of bullies, but they feel recycled rather than reinterpreted. When Mr. Han, played again by Jackie Chan, enters the picture, he brings warmth and screen presence, but not the emotional gravity of Mr. Miyagi. That role, once inhabited with deep humanity by Pat Morita, is impossible to replicate, and this film doesn't find a new angle on the mentor figure to justify trying.
Ralph Macchio returns as Daniel LaRusso, and as always, he treats the character with respect and dedication. He remains the connective tissue of the entire franchise. But the script gives him little to work with. He appears not as a natural evolution of the character but as a symbolic nod to nostalgia. His presence feels obligatory rather than essential. The emotional center never quite finds its balance, and what could have been a meditation on mentorship becomes a checklist of familiar tropes.
The film borrows from Cobra Kai's tone without its tighter emotional stakes. It borrows from the reboot without any real thematic bridge. The action scenes are competent but inflated. And the ending, rather than resolving anything, leaves the door open for more, as if the story has become less about telling something meaningful and more about keeping a brand alive for one more round.
This is not a terrible film. It is watchable, sometimes even entertaining. But it feels like a missed opportunity, a film made by people who knew what worked once but didn't know how to recreate it without repeating themselves. It wants to mean something. It just doesn't earn it.
Ralph Macchio, through all of this, remains a figure of sincere affection. He holds onto the character of Daniel with quiet dignity, and for many people of a certain generation, that is enough to keep watching. But if this franchise wants to move forward, it needs to stop looking sideways. The heart of The Karate Kid was never in the fights or the callbacks. It came from how seriously the story was taken. The sincerity, that created. A coming of age movie that looked the characters and the audience in the eye, is what carried this story for forty years.
KK legends, tried to do it but it got lost on the way.
Still, Ralph Macchio, if you're reading this, you'll always be the Karate Kid to me.
The nostalgic pull that once powered Cobra Kai is back, at least in intention. The show began with something rare, a sense of care for its legacy characters. Ralph Macchio and William Zabka were never reduced to sentimental walk-ons. They were fully fleshed-out leads, still shaped by their past but stumbling through the present with a level of emotional realism that surprised people. For a moment, it worked. The first two seasons had a charm that honored the original films without pandering. You could tell the people behind it actually loved the material.
But when Netflix stepped in for Season Three, something shifted. What began as a lean, character-driven revival turned into an overcrowded, hyperactive drama designed to feed on algorithmic success. It became more interested in spinning off plotlines and inflating rivalries than in deepening the characters it started with. The show leaned heavily on Karate Kid Part III, arguably the weakest installment of the original trilogy, and replicated its mistakes on a larger, glossier scale. What should have been emotionally intimate became bloated. Too many characters, too many arcs, and not nearly enough patience.
By the time the show ended, it was clear that the heart of Cobra Kai still resided in the performances of Macchio and Zabka, but the storytelling had been handed over to a different agenda, one that prioritized noise over nuance. The younger audience loved it, but there's a difference between engagement and emotional investment. Reddit may still be debating the motives of every secondary character, but that obsession with quantity says more about the current media landscape than it does about the story's quality.
So when Karate Kid Legends announced itself as a continuation, expectations were mixed. The decision to set the story three years after the series hinted at a deliberate effort to create space, to reset the tone and allow something new to develop. There is one well-placed cameo that acknowledges the past, but otherwise the film steers clear of the show's tangled narrative. This could have worked. The idea of Macchio returning as a mentor in a stand-alone story held potential. A full-length feature could offer emotional clarity that episodic television no longer had room for. This was a chance to return to character, to quiet moments, to storytelling with restraint.
But instead of using that opportunity, the film makes a strange and ultimately misguided decision. It chooses to merge its narrative with the 2010 remake of The Karate Kid, the one starring Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan. That film, while technically competent and commercially successful, was not a continuation of the original saga. It took the brand name, moved the story to China, and replaced karate with kung fu. Will Smith's production company had purchased the rights, and unsurprisingly, his son was cast in the lead. The film had moments of charm but lacked the emotional architecture of the original. It was a different story entirely, built on different values.
Bringing those elements into Karate Kid Legends creates a dissonance that never resolves. The new protagonist, Ali Fong, arrives in New York from China with his single mother. He is already highly skilled in kung fu, which undermines much of the tension that should come from a student's journey. The familiar beats are all here, a school setting, a love interest, a group of bullies, but they feel recycled rather than reinterpreted. When Mr. Han, played again by Jackie Chan, enters the picture, he brings warmth and screen presence, but not the emotional gravity of Mr. Miyagi. That role, once inhabited with deep humanity by Pat Morita, is impossible to replicate, and this film doesn't find a new angle on the mentor figure to justify trying.
Ralph Macchio returns as Daniel LaRusso, and as always, he treats the character with respect and dedication. He remains the connective tissue of the entire franchise. But the script gives him little to work with. He appears not as a natural evolution of the character but as a symbolic nod to nostalgia. His presence feels obligatory rather than essential. The emotional center never quite finds its balance, and what could have been a meditation on mentorship becomes a checklist of familiar tropes.
The film borrows from Cobra Kai's tone without its tighter emotional stakes. It borrows from the reboot without any real thematic bridge. The action scenes are competent but inflated. And the ending, rather than resolving anything, leaves the door open for more, as if the story has become less about telling something meaningful and more about keeping a brand alive for one more round.
This is not a terrible film. It is watchable, sometimes even entertaining. But it feels like a missed opportunity, a film made by people who knew what worked once but didn't know how to recreate it without repeating themselves. It wants to mean something. It just doesn't earn it.
Ralph Macchio, through all of this, remains a figure of sincere affection. He holds onto the character of Daniel with quiet dignity, and for many people of a certain generation, that is enough to keep watching. But if this franchise wants to move forward, it needs to stop looking sideways. The heart of The Karate Kid was never in the fights or the callbacks. It came from how seriously the story was taken. The sincerity, that created. A coming of age movie that looked the characters and the audience in the eye, is what carried this story for forty years.
KK legends, tried to do it but it got lost on the way.
Still, Ralph Macchio, if you're reading this, you'll always be the Karate Kid to me.
Did you know
- TriviaRalph Macchio pushed hard to have a line in this movie that says, "Anytime I have the chance to spread a piece of his legacy, it's never the wrong choice,'" Macchio told HuffPost in an interview. "It's always paramount that Miyagi is woven into the fabric of Daniel LaRusso. Reprising this role means paying that legacy forward," Macchio added. "It's about spreading that wisdom and knowledge in a good way, in a positive way."
- GoofsThe film opens with a scene from Karate Kid II (1986) in Okinawa that is stated to take place in 1986. While the film was released in 1986, the events of the film take place in 1985.
- ConnectionsEdited from Karate Kid II (1986)
- SoundtracksOriginal Karate Kid Themes
Written by Bill Conti
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Child Stars, Then and Now
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Karate Kid: Leyendas
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $45,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $52,547,391
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $20,302,016
- Jun 1, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $110,313,810
- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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