

One of those ideas? It might just be the return of the only character left to return: Hilary Swank's Julie Pierce from The Next Karate Kid. " We have lots of ideas of continuing and keeping the Karate Kid vibes going through other stories and other shows and different formats for that." "We do have a place where it’s all going, but that doesn’t mean the world has to stop there," Hurwitz told Total Film.
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It's just a matter of when the series will reach that point. Regardless, Cobra Kai's creators do have an endgame in sight. There’s time and places to make official things, we’re not at that place right now." Yeah. But there were no actual scenes filmed for Season Six." Regardless, Schlossberg chimed in, "There’s no official response to, except we have lots of ideas. Some of those character or story moments may appear in a future season. "There may have been some things filmed in Season Five that got cut out of the season. "We have filmed nothing that’s in Season Six," he said. And Hurwitz quasi-contradicted them in a recent interview with Games Radar. Macchio's comments are a little confusing, though. "There's stuff that was in Season Five that we know we shot that is being held for the future if we get that green light, so there's more to come, we hope." " There's stuff that they wrote in Season Three that didn't happen until Season Four, 'cause there wasn't any more room in Season Three," Macchio told ComicBook. Macchio already hinted that footage exists for future seasons. Season Six has all but been officially confirmed. Those plans likely include more Cobra Kai. Cobra Kai's creative team Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz, and Hayden Schlossberg have long made known their plans to expand what they've dubbed the Miyagi-verse into a full dojo's worth of spinoffs. 'The Karate Kid II' is the Franchise's Best Film.The 'Cobra Kai' Season 5 Finale Sets Up an Endgame.Or else we're going to see what Cobra Kai's version of The Karate Kid III is. Seeing Daniel LaRusso once again shitting his diaper and asking everyone else to clean it up, the kiddos switching sides again and again and again, and Johnny Lawrence reach his seventh coming-of-age, the thought was unavoidable: Cobra Kai needs to stop while it's ahead. Watching Season Five of Cobra Kai-which I enjoyed, for the most part-gave me a sinking feeling. Not just because, with the introduction of Silver, Cobra Kai has been flooded with The Karate Kid III's regrettable lore. The Karate Kid III turned out to be crusty backwash that wasn't remedied until the 2018 debut of Cobra Kai.Īs I wrapped my binge of the new season of Cobra Kai, I got to thinking about The Karate Kid III. A coked-up Terry Silver, bonsai tree drama, a clearly too-old-to-be-playing-a-kid-anymore Macchio. In fact, I think Ralph Macchio should've hung it up then and there. I'll defend The Karate Kid II until the day I die. It damn near quadrupled the stakes of a silly karate tournament. And while all of you adults who still dress up as Young Johnny Lawrence for Halloween every year, just so you can scream at your kids, "You couldn't leave well enough alone, could you, little twerp?" will probably fight me on this, The Karate Kid II was infinitely more mediative than its predecessor. Back in 1986-a year that also saw the releases of Top Gunand Hoosiers-we laid our eyes on The Karate Kid II.
