(He only corrupts young kids as a hobby, he disposes of nuclear waste for a living.) It would, of course, have been preferable if they'd found something more interesting to come between Daniel and Miyagi than the ethics of another Karate tournament. These are some of the film's best scenes as Daniel's innate sense of good is eroded by the Satanic Silver.
While Kreese suns himself in Tahiti at Silver's expense, his pony-tailed Vietnam buddy sets about driving a wedge between Daniel and Miyagi, eventually becoming Daniel's trainer. The characters putting the pressure on our diminutive hero are working for slippery millionaire Terry Silver and our old mate Kreese (Martin Kove) now down and out after his Cobra team's defeat in the first film. Miyagi doesn't want him to do it, and refuses to train him when - under duress - Daniel signs the entrance form. (Kid fans will recall he also used his college money in the last one to fly to Okinawa - American colleges must be very expensive.)ĭaniel's having the emotional and physical screws put on him to defend his Hill Valley karate title. trying to build a bonsai shop out of a ramshackle hut that Daniel's bought with his college money. Avildsen's third outing as Karate Kid director finds his boys back in the U.S. "This is the 80s - you gotta do something! You can't be so passive!" says Daniel LaRusso to Mr Miyagi and the scene is set for confrontation in the pair's relationship.