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The Karate Kid is back, and this time with Legends. But is it any good?
The Karate Kid is back, and this time with Legends. But is it any good?

Sydney Morning Herald

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

The Karate Kid is back, and this time with Legends. But is it any good?

Karate Kid: Legends ★★★ There were two moments during the packed preview screening I attended of the latest Karate Kid offering when the audience erupted in cheers and applause, and each was a moment that Blind Freddy could have seen coming. And despite every cynical impulse in my body (and there are many), I was swept along a little too. This is the absolute definition of a crowd-pleaser. Packed full of fan service, cameos and nods to tradition – both within the film franchise and more broadly within families, cultures and martial arts – Karate Kid: Legends offers little by way of innovation and plenty by way of giving the people what they want. It's derivative, corny and, in its utterly predictable way, great fun. If you've seen the original The Karate Kid (1984), or indeed the Netflix spin-off series Cobra Kai that ran for six seasons from 2018, you've got the idea. Kid turns up in a new town, having sworn off the martial art he used to practise. A gang of bullies take a dislike to him, and beat him up. His single mum is busy working, so doesn't really notice how much trouble he's getting into. His only ally is a cute girl, who used to go out with the lead bully, who naturally wants to smash the new kid even harder because he's jealous. The new kid's only hope for escape from this vicious cycle is to win a local tournament, where he'll get to beat said bully in the ring. But to do that he'll need the help of a gifted sensei, who will teach him The Way. Wax on, wax off. Yada yada. Here, the kid is Li Fong (Ben Wang), who moves with his medico mother from Beijing to New York. Back home, he'd been tutored by his uncle, Mr Han (Jackie Chan). In New York, he himself becomes tutor to the pizza-shop-owning father of his sort-of girlfriend Mia (Sadie Stanley). It's an improbable move, but at least it gives Joshua Jackson (of long-ago Dawson's Creek fame) a chance to display his considerable charm and reasonably convincing chops as a boxer. Inevitably, the kid is himself drawn back to the ring, to compete in the Five Boroughs karate tournament. The thing is, he's only studied kung-fu up to this point. Enter Mr Han, who takes it upon himself to fly to LA and persuade Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) to hop on a plane and help train the kid in the way of Mr Miyagi. And then … Well, as Morrissey sang, stop me if you think that you've heard this one before (and trust me, you have).

The Karate Kid is back, and this time with Legends. But is it any good?
The Karate Kid is back, and this time with Legends. But is it any good?

The Age

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

The Karate Kid is back, and this time with Legends. But is it any good?

Karate Kid: Legends ★★★ There were two moments during the packed preview screening I attended of the latest Karate Kid offering when the audience erupted in cheers and applause, and each was a moment that Blind Freddy could have seen coming. And despite every cynical impulse in my body (and there are many), I was swept along a little too. This is the absolute definition of a crowd-pleaser. Packed full of fan service, cameos and nods to tradition – both within the film franchise and more broadly within families, cultures and martial arts – Karate Kid: Legends offers little by way of innovation and plenty by way of giving the people what they want. It's derivative, corny and, in its utterly predictable way, great fun. If you've seen the original The Karate Kid (1984), or indeed the Netflix spin-off series Cobra Kai that ran for six seasons from 2018, you've got the idea. Kid turns up in a new town, having sworn off the martial art he used to practise. A gang of bullies take a dislike to him, and beat him up. His single mum is busy working, so doesn't really notice how much trouble he's getting into. His only ally is a cute girl, who used to go out with the lead bully, who naturally wants to smash the new kid even harder because he's jealous. The new kid's only hope for escape from this vicious cycle is to win a local tournament, where he'll get to beat said bully in the ring. But to do that he'll need the help of a gifted sensei, who will teach him The Way. Wax on, wax off. Yada yada. Here, the kid is Li Fong (Ben Wang), who moves with his medico mother from Beijing to New York. Back home, he'd been tutored by his uncle, Mr Han (Jackie Chan). In New York, he himself becomes tutor to the pizza-shop-owning father of his sort-of girlfriend Mia (Sadie Stanley). It's an improbable move, but at least it gives Joshua Jackson (of long-ago Dawson's Creek fame) a chance to display his considerable charm and reasonably convincing chops as a boxer. Inevitably, the kid is himself drawn back to the ring, to compete in the Five Boroughs karate tournament. The thing is, he's only studied kung-fu up to this point. Enter Mr Han, who takes it upon himself to fly to LA and persuade Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) to hop on a plane and help train the kid in the way of Mr Miyagi. And then … Well, as Morrissey sang, stop me if you think that you've heard this one before (and trust me, you have).

Joshua Jackson, Jodie Turner-Smith Finalise Divorce After 5 Years Of Marriage
Joshua Jackson, Jodie Turner-Smith Finalise Divorce After 5 Years Of Marriage

NDTV

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • NDTV

Joshua Jackson, Jodie Turner-Smith Finalise Divorce After 5 Years Of Marriage

Los Angeles: Hollywood actors Joshua Jackson and Jodie Turner-Smith have finally arrived at the settlement in their divorce. However, they are yet to arrive at a mutual consensus when it comes to their daughter's education, reports 'People' magazine. The 'Dawson's Creek' alum, 46, and the Queen & Slim actress, 38, have agreed to the terms of their split, according to legal documents obtained by 'People' though the couple has yet to agree on where their daughter, 4-year-old Juno, will be going to school. TMZ was first to report the news. The couple has agreed that they'll use a mediator to plan a schedule for the 50-50 custody of their daughter, that Joshua will pay $2,787 in child support and that there will be no monthly spousal support, rather a lump sum. In addition to the terms the couple has agreed on, Turner-Smith also claims, in other court documents, that Jackson has pushed back on a court order regarding her making the decision tied to where their daughter will go to school. Representatives for both Turner-Smith and Jackson did not immediately respond to requests for comment. As per 'People', in the declaration, Turner-Smith said that she and her former husband "participated in a full-day mediation" with a judge in May 2024 and resolved their "temporary custody issues" for their daughter's 2024-25 school year. Following the judge's term with them, both Turner-Smith and Jackson later entered "into a Stipulation and Order to resolve the issue of selection of Juno's school', with Turner-Smith writing that it authorized her "to make the final decision" regarding their daughter's education. She wrote in the document, "As such, I have the clear authority to make the school selection in Juno's best interest, and Josh is refusing to adhere to the terms of the Stipulation and Order and is depriving me of the right to select the school'.

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