Cobra Kai returns with the evil boss of all evil bosses, a bunch of scores to settle, and a karate empire to thwart in another winning installment.
for a show to have and probably the best way to honor a film series that utilized dumb teenage anger for the sake of action. There's just a moment of very poor decision-making on the part of our heroes that feels like it should lead them down a much different path than it does. Space travel, world building, rendering technology, and more are all covered here in our IGN Performance Preview.](/videos/starfield-performance-preview) [The Last of Us Part 1 - PS5 vs PS4 vs PS3The Last of Us Part 1 on PS5 has now arrived! That doesn't mean there's no path toward Season 6, since a very big story opens up for our heroes in Episode 8, but there are just elements of this ending that play like the end-end if need be. Just to be at a point now where Daniel and Johnny can operate as full friends, and see the actual benefits in each others' style (this season has a fun element where the two seem to switch roles for a while), is incredible. The same can be said for Daniel and Chozen (Yuji Okumoto), and it's actually Chozen's role this season that shines the brightest. This is the first post-All-Valley Tournament storyline since the show's second season so, much like that year, there's aftermath to deal with, regrouping and recouping to contend with, and healing in need of happening. Thomas Ian Griffith's wealthy and malevolent Terry Silver is now in charge of Cobra Kai and has grand plans for the expansion of the dojo. As usual, Cobra Kai is filled with drama born of simple misunderstandings but it also earns the hell out of its reckonings and reconciliations with creative tricks and rewarding exchanges. Five seasons into Cobra Kai and there's a definite pattern at play, though it still has room for twists and turns. On top of this, Johnny is now more forward-thinking than ever, having to consider the future in ways he never anticipated while also wanting to his son Robbie (Tanner Buchanan) and his surrogate son Miguel (Xolo Maridueña) to make amends. Cobra Kai's fifth season breaks tradition with the last two outings, which have premiered at year's end, with a September debut and a conclusion that, for the first time, feels like default closure should the series not return for another run.
'Cobra Kai' Season 5 premiere recap: Johnny and Robby head to Mexico in search of Miguel, while Daniel makes a very difficult decision.
As the episode draws to a close, Daniel puts a large tarp over his Miyagi-Do sign, while Robby and Johnny drive onward into the night. As one guy tries to steal his wallet, Johnny exchanges words with the leader. We open with a commercial showcasing “the new era” of Cobra Kai. At the Russo household, Amanda is angry that Daniel brought his “Okinawan assassin” into the mix. Was Johnny able to find his mentee, and what’s Chozen’s role in all of this madness? With the tournament finally behind them, some people have moved on from all of the karate drama, but Daniel can’t pull away from his obsession with Silver.
Episode 10 of Cobra Kai Season 5 starts with Kreese resigning himself to spending the rest of his days in prison. He reflects on the mistakes he's made ...
Kenny also realizes the error of his ways too and is shameful over his part to play in all this. Barnes jumps in and helps change the dynamic of the fight and the duo come out on top. When the transfer is complete, all of Cobra Kai see Silver admit to paying off the ref for Tory’s victory. He drives out and picks up Daniel by the side of the road. At the same time, Demetri works to try and upload the footage while Hawk holds off the kids who arrive, led by Kenny. Although Silver has deleted the footage from his attack on Stingray, he hasn’t deleted the confession he made to Tory about paying off the ref.
Netflix's Cobra Kai has clocked in 100%, 90%, 90% and 95% critics scores for the first four seasons, and now season 5 has arrived with another 100% score, ...
Season 5 looks to be another high quality offering from the team, and it’s not a matter of if it hits number one on Netflix, but when, and for how long it will stay there. Cobra Kai, however, is in the rare Netflix category of shows that never have to fear renewal, and so far, Netflix doesn’t have to worry about it putting out a stinker of a season, which has not happened yet. The show has been a star-maker, allowing Xolo Mariduena to nab the role of Blue Beetle for DC, and has elevated Peyton List to become a bonafide Gen Z superstar online. It’s almost the perfect Netflix show, one with a low budget that both critics and fans love and a seemingly endless fountain ideas of how to continue the story as characters shuffle between dojos and compete in yearly karate tournaments. 100% from fans too, but that’s based on a tiny amount of reviews, given that it just arrived a few hours ago. But finally C) almost always reviews very, very well, unlike a lot of other Netflix top hits as of late.
Welcome back to the Valley! A recap of “Long, Long Way From Home,” episode 1 and the premiere of season five of 'Cobra Kai' on Netflix.
We’ll have to wait to see how Tory is handling the revelation that her All Valley victory was based on a lie and how Kreese is handling prison — as well as checking in with Demetri, Eli, Kenny, and Anthony LaRusso, none of whom get any attention in this premiere. At the end of the episode, we see exactly what that means: Chozen is prepared to become a sensei at Cobra Kai and take it down from the inside as a mole. When the Australian guys who robbed Miguel try the same gambit with Johnny, he and his son easily handle the situation, the first big fight of the season. It all feels a bit predictable: There’s a minor local threat in the form of a few Australian guys who take almost all of Miguel’s cash, followed by a case of mistaken identity when Miguel meets the wrong Hector, followed by the moment when he accidentally stumbles upon the real Hector. Daniel doesn’t need to convey to Chozen how much of a threat Silver is; deception was a cornerstone of Kim’s teaching, and Silver uses the same tactics. Of course, Daniel has no real intention of letting Silver win, and now he has a new ally: Chozen Toguchi, his onetime rival who almost killed him back in 1985 in The Karate Kid Part II.
Mike Barnes is one of the main antagonists in Karate Kid 3 and is played by Sean Kanan. He's secretly hired by Terry Silver – who is seeking revenge on Daniel ...
One suspicious phone call sets alarm bells ringing and Daniel attacks Mike, who explains he’s actually the owner of a furniture store. The pair eventually reconcile before the tournament, with Miyagi defeating Mike, Kreese, and Terry. Miyagi on behalf of his war buddy Kreese – to win the All-Valley Tournament and beat Daniel. Miyagi in the process. And what is his relationship with Terry Silver? Cobra Kai is no stranger to re-introducing and revisiting key characters from Karate Kid’s past.
Pay for my tattoo of an Olive Garden breadstick, with little steaming squiggles coming out of the ends, and I'll get it right now. OG 4 lyfe, baby. Come at my ...
At the end of the episode, the trio all take a bite of a breadstick, in unison. This isn't like the Applebee's scene in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, where it's part of the joke, that the Bobby fam is having this big hoorah at an Applebee's, treating it like they're at Ruth's Chris. Come at my suburban Olive Garden—Greentree, PA, the GOAT—and I will defend it with my very life. Turn out that, in an effort to make Robby and Miguel best friends, Johnny invited the two for a come-to-Jesus at the Italian ( [okay, "Italian"](https://www.esquire.com/food-drink/restaurants/a19562071/olive-garden-meatball-pizza-bowl/)) mecca. There's some humor going on in Cobra Kai, but I actually believe, in my heart of hearts, that money was transferred here, with the intent of Johnny Lawrence earnestly speaking about the healing power of breadsticks. Pay for my tattoo of an Olive Garden breadstick, with little steaming squiggles coming out of the ends, and I'll get it right now.
Cobra Kai creators Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg, and Josh Heald do a season 5 deep dive with io9.
And the second that you scratch the itch of “What did those guys do with the car?” It leads to a whole other bunch of questions. And we’re super thrilled to be collaborating with Bill Posley on it, who’s one of our Cobra Kai writers, and he has such a great take on it that we don’t want to spoil and we’re going to let him do his thing in the script phase for now. And while we haven’t written a sixth season yet, we’ve certainly had some discussions as to the kinds of things we want to do there and the kinds of characters that may make sense to show up in a logical way. “So we want the audience to feel all the emotions and go through a roller coaster and at the end, still get to play with our action figures. I think there are so many branches of this tree that are left to climb on and we want to climb them all. And in some ways, season five is a dream season because he gets to really be in charge and be on top of the mountain. And if we’re going to use it on the show, we want it to be impactful and meaningful and give all those goosebumps that you’d want. In some ways, just in terms of storytelling, the threat of death is the visceral feeling that you really want to get in these scenes. The assumption is he’s going to be a bad guy next year, and you kind of confirmed that, but I found it interesting that the moment he escapes prison is also the moment he’s exonerated. I don’t think it broke our bank, but it was one of the things there was a lot of back and forth on like “How can we make it look better and better and better?” And there were a lot of drafts of that when it comes down to it. But we love the result and we think we have a few scenes this season - whether it was that scene or Samantha LaRusso fighting herself - scenes that were different types of filmmaking exploration that we haven’t had on the show in the past that we thought were fun additions for this year. And we like the idea that Mike, unlike some people, kind of found his path and kind of moved on in a way that the other characters hadn’t.
Cobra Kai debuted its new season on Netflix this Friday, and it's precisely as chaotic as I've implied above. The season finale of The Karate Kid sequel series ...
The shitty one in the retail mall. If you ask me, the best conclusion to Cobra Kai would be bringing it all back to the beginning. The OG Karate Kid meanie spent this season in an odd sort of non-redemptive vision quest, but whatever! The season finale sees the culmination of the Silver vs. The season finale of The Karate Kid sequel series sees LaRusso, Lawrence, and Chozen pull up to The Cobra Kai team has to make sure there's another Little Lawrence out there for the 2036 reboot of The Karate Kid, right? But there are some redeemable kids on the Bad side, and vice versa. The Good Guys battle that's been brewing since the very end of Season Three. [Cobra Kai ](https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a41125032/cobra-kai-season-6/) [Season Six](https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a41125032/cobra-kai-season-6/) needs to kill Daniel LaRusso. We get a few worthwhile gags along the way, with the Johnny-as-an-Uber-driver bit by far standing out as one of this season's best moments. [Cobra Kai ](https://www.esquire.com/preview/entertainment/tv/a37414660/netflix-cobra-kai-season-5/) [Season Five](https://www.esquire.com/preview/entertainment/tv/a37414660/netflix-cobra-kai-season-5/) finale begins, essentially, with Daniel LaRusso, Johnny Lawrence, Chozen, and Mike Barnes in one place. Did any child of the '80s ever, ever think that a 60-year-old [Ralph Macchio](https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a35067193/ralph-macchio-william-zabka-cobra-kai-season-3-interview/) would share the screen with all of his [OG trilogy](https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a35091708/cobra-kai-season-3-karate-kid-2-kumiko-chozen/) kiddie villains, all at once, looking like that pointing-fingers Spider-Man meme?
It's none other than Mike Barnes (Sean Kanan), Karate's Bad Boy! Mike is after revenge after Terry Silver (Thomas Ian Griffith) had his furniture store burned ...
Some of the series' largest plot threads were neatly wrapped up in the Cobra Kai season 5 finale, too, so the future of the show is up in the air. In fact, in a flashback to Silver and Kreese's time training with the man, a young Kim Da-Eun watches them train from a hiding place behind some pots. Both Cobra Kai and Daniel and Johnny's dojo qualify for the tournament. Then, the plan was to finish the match in one strike and take home the trophy for Cobra Kai. He was enlisted by Silver to beat Daniel in the All Valley tournament, but in a particularly nasty way: the plan was for Mike to win a point against Daniel, then do something to get the point taken away as penalty, and on and on until the sudden death round. Their kids are in trouble and need help at the Cobra Kai dojo ASAP – the youngsters are out to take down Cobra Kai once and for all. With Silver defeated and the cheating exposed, Cobra Kai seems finished. To win the fight, Daniel uses a very familiar move: that iconic crane kick, for the very first time in the series. All out battle breaks out in the Cobra Kai dojo. The Cobra Kai kids are onto the Miyagi-Dos and Eagle Fangs, though. After a brief scuffle, Mike is convinced that his real enemy is Silver, and he, Johnny, and Chozen head off to bring the fight directly to their great nemesis. The finale wraps things up with a truly epic bang, but with so much going on, it's easy to get muddled on some of the finer details of what exactly goes down in the season 5 ending.
A lot happens in 'Cobra Kai' Season 5, including the introduction of some intriguing characters both new and old. If you have questions, we've got answers.
He’s still alive, after all, and as we saw in Season 5 with Kreese, just because a character is in jail doesn’t mean they can’t still play a pivotal role. That feels like a vote of confidence that the series isn’t done yet, although when it comes to Netflix, nothing is certain. It’s unclear what he might do next, but considering how Johnny and Daniel screwed him over earlier in Season 5, we have a feeling he might be out for revenge. A lot happens in Cobra Kai Season 5, including the introduction of some intriguing characters both new and old. That plan involves breaking into Cobra Kai headquarters and downloading footage of Silver brutally assaulting Stingray (Paul Walter Hauser), a crime he later used to frame John Kreese (Martin Kove). When the cops show up, Stingray admits that he lied, which the police say is enough to put Silver in jail — or at least on trial. In a final twist, Kreese engineers a daring escape from prison by faking his own stabbing and stealing a key card from his therapist. It was the story of a washed-up Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka) finding meaning in his own life by training a [new generation](https://www.inverse.com/entertainment/cobra-kai-season-4-karate-kid-3) of karate kids — while feuding with his old rival Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio). Using all the training he’s ever received Daniel, scores a decisive victory. Thankfully, that’s when Daniel shows up and challenges his one-time sensei to a fight. It doesn’t go well, mostly because Silver has an entire team of karate masters with him waiting for the attack. The final episodes split up the story into several plotlines that eventually intertwine, so let’s go through them one at a time.