Cobra Kai was what actually grabbed my interest and made me a fan of the Karate Kid storyline/ fictional universe, as I said during the Karate Kid blog post. In this post, I want to continue to explore these characters’ complex relationship with one another and how in this story, there’s really no villain or “good vs evil,” just people at odds with other people. I know you’re probably tired of me ranting on and on about the Karate Kid universe, so this is the last post, I promise. Maybe…
Let’s get started
- Johnny Lawrence – dynamic, round
- Miguel Diaz – dynamic, round
- Eli/Hawk – supporting/antagonist, dynamic, flat
- Aisha – supporting, dynamic, round
- Robbie Keene – dynamic, round
- Samantha LaRusso – supporting, dynamic, round
- Daniel LaRusso – dynamic, round
- Amanda LaRusso – supporting, static, round
- Kyler – antagonist, dynamic, flat
- Yasmine – antagonist, dynamic, flat
With Cobra Kai, the story line and character relationships are unique. You may have realized that I didn’t tell what type of characters Johnny, Miguel, Daniel, and Robbie were. This isn’t a typo, this is intentional, because I don’t really know how to label them. In the show, the point of view continuously shifts between these four characters. Usually, I would just label them all protagonist, then, but in this case it isn’t so simple. Depending on which character the POV is current at, and also depending on what episode in the season, the relationship of that character with those other four characters changes. Initially, Johnny Lawrence, the antagonist of the Karate Kid movie, is the protagonist here. When Johnny and Daniel meet again after 30 years, Daniel’s mistrust and past grudges get the better of him, and he continuously rekindles their old rivalry, making Daniel the antagonist. Later, the story shifts and Daniel takes the POV, showing in his eyes that Johnny is still the antagonist. Later, Johnny’s son takes the POV. Johnny has been such a crappy dad, that Robbie doesn’t even take his father’s last name. In Robbie’s POV, Johnny is the antagonist and Daniel takes the role of a father figure/ mentor to him in the same way Mr. Miyagi did to Daniel all those years ago. However, eventually Daniel and Johnny let go of their past rivalry, no longer seeing each other as their own antagonist, but when Daniel finds out that his student and son-figure is Johnny’s actual son, and when Johnny finds out that his son whom he has desperately been trying to make up for lost years has such a close bond with his old rival, they both lose it. Johnny again sees Daniel as his antagonist, and attacks him. Daniel, feeling betrayed, shuns Robbie temporarily. At no point in this story, are the character’s roles ever concrete.
Johnny, the former antagonist of the Karate Kid movie, realizes that his life has now become disgraceful. He has become an alcoholic, he has lost his job, and he hasn’t used his beloved karate in years. This all changes however when he meets Miguel, who is currently being bullied by a teen named Kyler. After the bulling escalates too far, Johnny intervenes, and ends up beating up Kyler and his bully friends who tried to fight him. Feeling good about finally using karate again, and after constant hounding by Miguel/ seeing Daniel’s karate car salesman ads all over the tv, he relents and decides to train Miguel in karate, reopening the Cobra Kai dojo. Eventually, after Miguel has learned enough karate, he defends himself and Samantha from Kyler, humiliating Kyler in a public fight. This attention brings lots of bullied teens to Johnny’s doorstep, who want to learn karate to gain confidence and end the bulling. Two of which are named Eli, and Aisha. Aisha is bullied about her weight, Eli is bullied about a scar on his lip. Eventually, Aisha puts an end to her bulling by giving a wedgie and humiliating Yasmine, the mean popular girl at school who is the one that makes fun of her weight on social media. Eli, wanting to flip the script, changes his name to Hawk, and gets a Mohawk, excelling at his karate lessons and no longer allowing himself to be afraid.
Now, the high school bullies are the ones that are afraid, and Hawk and Aisha have become fierce, confident, and aggressive in their pursuit of payback.
This aggressive and sudden change in behavior of these students who are now in Cobra Kai paints Johnny’s dojo as aggressive and dangerous in Daniel’s eyes, who only sees the violence he experienced in the past. His daughter, Samantha, who sees Miguel as a good person is conflicted about her father’s point of view. She doesn’t see all of Cobra Kai as evil and bullies. Eventually Johnny’s son, Robbie, intentionally seeks out Daniel LaRusso after seeing Johnny and Miguel’s close relationship. He wants Johnny to be jealous when he finds out that his son has been spending time with his old rival. Overtime, though, Robbie changes as Daniel teaches him the same way Mr. Miyagi taught karate. Through these teachings, Robbie finds inner peace and learns the true meaning of karate, wanting to confess to Daniel about why he initially sought him out, but being too scared to do so. At one point, when Daniel and Johnny finally meet to talk their issues with each other out, they both nearly let go of their fued, Daniel almost seeing Cobra Kai as changed. When Daniel tries to introduce his own student, Robbie, to Johhny, the cat is let out of the bag and they both become at odds with each other again. Later, after Robbie starts to spend time with Samantha, Miguel gets jealous, and lashes out while he is drunk, trying to pick a fight with Robbie and end up hitting Samantha. This tilts her viewpoint of Cobra Kai from unsure to thinking that they are indeed all bad.
The tv show ends when the yearly tournament arrives, and Kobra Kai participates using the aggressive training that Johnny taught them, which was taught to him by John Kreese. Robbie makes a surprise entrance in the tournament, trying to win back the trust of Daniel, and prove to his father that the Cobra Kai training is not the true way of karate. After some time of silently cheering Robbie on from the audience stands, Daniel finally lets go of his feeling of betrayal and decides to officially become Robbie’s mentor after Hawk attacked Robbie between matches, hurting his shoulder. Hawk of course was disqualified, but the damage had been done, Robbie was injuried and would now have to face a still brooding Miguel. During the fight, Johnny is torn between his prized student and son-figure, Miguel, and his actual son Robbie, was on the opposite team. When Miguel tells Johnny not to worry, that he’ll win at any cost, even to take advantage of Robbie’s injury, Johnny is finally made aware just how violent and wrong his teachings were. In the last round of the final match, Miguel crushes Robbie by aiming for his injured shoulder, and winning the tournament. Miguel and the other Cobra Kai members dance and cheer, hugging Johnny who is now holding the trophy, his life dream of wining the tournament having now come true, but all he can think about his guilt.
This kind of character depth and character arches is the level of writing I aspire to achieve. Johnny is shown to be a good person, that just has a flawed mentality. Miguel, who arguably my favorite character in the entire season, is such a sweetheart and a nice guy, but jealousy and the aggressive teachings of Cobra Kai turned him into a bully. I now no longer see a bully as simply a “evil, waste of space character,” because I still love and root for Miguel, despite his flaws and poor decisions/ attitude at times. I still see Daniel as my favorite character from the original movie, despite his continued belief that Johnny and Cobra Kai is pure evil, even though that I know as the audience that Johnny is legitimately trying to change and make these kids’ lives better by teaching them to stand up for themselves. This complex character writing and sense that the world isn’t just black and white, but blurry at times is amazing. This is why I deem Johnny, Daniel, Miguel, Samantha, and Robbie as all “Good” characters!